Example sentences of "as [adj] [conj] [art] [noun sg] and " in BNC.

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1 In every isolated basin of the plateau the life led by the common people day after day was as monotonous as the climate and the landscape ; and everything that deviated from the ordinary , everything strange or unforeseen , was regarded as supernatural .
2 By that time — possibly as little as a year and a half after Jesus 's death — they must already have been widespread and numerous , because Paul , acting on behalf of the established Sadducee priesthood and armed with warrants from the High Priest , undertakes to hunt them out as far away as Damascus .
3 Her mouth felt as dry as a bone and her eyes were closed against the intrusive light .
4 ‘ And the Guinea Coast afore that ? ’ she prompted , hoping for tales about unknown Africa that seemed to her as strange as the moon and as far away .
5 T. Rex was a terrible-looking carnivore , some 15 metres long and 5 metres high , as tall as a giraffe and weighing over 8 tons fully grown .
6 He was nearly as tall as the ceiling and hardly had to reach .
7 But I really like the bass ; it feels as solid as a rock and represents a more worthwhile investment for not a lot more money .
8 As solid as a rock and a very tough competitor , Clohessy would have been a perfect choice , particularly after going through the pre-Tour fitness regime .
9 She was wearing jeans but her top was a rather tight yellow T-shirt and she felt as gauche as a schoolgirl and very vulnerable .
10 George was a quick thinker so always did the introducing and all of the talking , but George did not talk about himself — he told of how Lennie was as strong as a bull and how he could buck barley all day .
11 Richard had only been climbing a few months , but he was as strong as an ox and had no respect for tradition ( he did n't know all the horror stories ) .
12 Public transport is as elusive as the wildlife and not recommended , besides which the USA is geared to the motorist above all others .
13 This Katherine instead reminded her a little of those refugee children she had housed during the war , ever polite , ever ready to comply , but as old as the world and never altogether of it .
14 ‘ A horse and a cart that stands as high as a house and cost the best part of thirty pounds and you lost them both ? ’
15 I 'm as high as a kite and there 's no champagne in the orange juice . ’
16 The sweater was as light as a puff and as smooth as a bird to touch .
17 And , after being out in the sunshine with the children most of the day , she 'd lost her pale , city complexion , becoming as brown as a berry and looking much younger .
18 As slim as a reed and as shy as a bird with the eyes of a gazelle , were all the aspects of beauty once described to me by the Youngest Son as most desirable in a woman .
19 During contests he was as jumpy as a schoolgirl and gave off a static charge of nervous energy .
20 It just shows how much people take for granted in contemporary society where kissing has become as ordinary as a handshake and the media are constantly giving us the message that sex is only exciting if it is different or forbidden .
21 The Libyan quarrel was referred to Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria , a very well-educated man , who sided with those theologians who stressed the distinctness of Father and Son ; they should not be said to be of one being but to be as distinct as the husbandman and the vine .
22 Once , he thought , there had been someone who had mattered all too much , but by the grace of God and Llewelyn she was safe out of his reach now , calm in her sanctuary above Aber ; a refuge as sacrosanct as the grave and almost as narrow .
23 When Mr Wormwood arrived back from the garage that evening his face was as dark as a thunder-cloud and somebody was clearly for the high-jump pretty soon .
24 ‘ She was as straight as a die and a pillar of the community .
25 His back was also as straight as a ramrod and his highly polished black gaiters had flashed in the sun .
26 One solution is to set the glass back as much as a foot and to use thick , matured timber mullions to break up the surface .
27 They were very rarely disturbed , at least by foreigners , since to hire a donkey cost a foreigner as much as a cab and pair of horses .
28 Paul Guillaume considered Modi a poet as much as a painter and remembered two improvised rhymes :
29 While the magnificence of the result could justify the fact that The Red Shoes cost twice as much as The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp , there were many cases where the extravagance worked against the final result , and Michael Powell has recalled that he became ‘ impatient at the complacency of my associates about the mounting costs of our films . ’
30 When the specimen was loaded in a testing machine the edges were stressed as much as the middle and so cracks started at the edges and spread inwards across the material in the usual way .
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