Example sentences of "an [adv] different [noun] of [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 JUST to prove that there is life after rugby , last year 's Grand Slam coach Roger Uttley decided to forsake this season 's Paris showdown in favour of an altogether different sort of grunt-and-grind in Boston .
2 She became aware at an early stage that there was an entirely different way of life available not far outside Baldersdale , perhaps more appealing to her , but it could have been on another planet .
3 Sunderland turned it on to win 3–0 against Ipswich and end their dismal sequence of five league defeats but Crosby expects an entirely different type of game against a side battling desperately for survival .
4 An entirely different kind of problem in modern living is ‘ noise pollution ’ and that term is increasingly being used to describe the problem of excessive noise .
5 For twelve years after J. and I were married we lived first in West and then East Africa , an entirely different kind of life from what had gone before .
6 All you need is an ‘ I know what you mean ’ or ‘ I can see what you 're getting at ’ for an entirely different kind of discussion to begin .
7 It never seemed to occur to him that a general idea might be an entirely different sort of thing from an image .
8 These ranged from the mighty Rutland and Ampair models to the Forgen , an entirely different design of wind generator which has deeper vanes that rotate round a vertical shaft .
9 Recalling the Vienna meeting of European military leaders earlier in the year , NATO proposed another such meeting in the autumn to establish " an entirely different quality of openness " in Europe , including an " Open Skies " agreement [ see p. 37267 ] .
10 Because of maintaining an apparently different brand of theism , Hinduism is often viewed by those whose main contact is with the Near Eastern religions either as atheist or as believing in a different god or gods .
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