Example sentences of "[adj] as [adv] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 We were very fortunate that our faithful ‘ visiting ’ advisers were willing as always to take care of art , music , social sciences , and playing cards ; and , above all , that Scott Anderson and Laurie Bruce would undertake the entire sorting and evaluating of stamps and records respectively .
2 It was n't so much as how to achieve a new social order , but how can I ensure that my son or daughter gets a better job than I did .
3 It was n't so much as how to achieve a new social order , but how can I ensure that my son or daughter gets a better job than I did .
4 No demand , however , was made on us by the gate-keeper , the authorities being so liberal as not to charge persons for walking either on the roads or footpaths .
5 As a male chainworker commented to Commissioner on the Factory Acts in 1876 : ‘ I should advocate their [ women 's ] time should be so limited as neither to interfere with their own health and morals or with our wages ’ .
6 Erm as desirable as that objective is , the fact of the matter is that inward investors , given the choice of the derelict industrial site in a town centre in North Yorkshire or an out of town motorway junction site to exaggerate the difference , in another part of the country is as likely as not to choose the other place .
7 Today 's newcomers are as likely as not to arrive from the opposite direction : businessmen seeking to escape the pollution , water shortages , high taxes and labour costs of southern California .
8 By fifty a married man or woman was as likely as not to have suffered widowhood , and would have already lost half his or her contemporaries : in contrast to a mere twentieth today .
9 Today an adolescent is probably as likely as not to belong to a family which is an uneasy mixture of the nuclear set-up and the institution known as serial marriage ( marriage , divorce , remarriage ) .
10 To an outsider visiting Imperial College , some of the departments seem so large as almost to prevent a sense of unity .
11 A common-sense assumption , so obvious as not to need labelling as such .
12 I shou 'd like a cloth one best if you please — I beg of your Sir to be so good as not to fail me this Cardinal by Wednesday , without fail , but let it be full yard long I beg , or else it will not do fail not on Wednesday , and in so doing you will very much oblige me .
13 They often suffered from vaginismus , but they invariably praised their husbands for being ‘ exceptionally kind ’ , passive , totally understanding and ‘ so good as not to bother me ’ .
14 Er but if they 're a sensing thinking person they will find it almost totally incomprehensible , that you 've been so lax as not to have actually worked out in detail erm you know what their job is ?
15 His sisters were still at home , unwilling as ever to comprehend him , only making him feel oafish , prematurely old , unclean .
16 Three more informants identified the clash of registers in " the sort of description you expect of old Salzburg and the simile " " like a half-eaten lunch " " " , which , again , they were unable as yet to resolve .
17 On every hand we had to pick our way past fulmar chicks unable as yet to fly .
18 As Alan Fox , a major proponent and later critic of pluralism , has put it , ‘ The pluralist does not claim anything approaching perfection for this system … [ but the imbalances of strength between employers and unions … are not seen as so numerous or severe as generally to discredit the system either from the union 's point of view or the management 's ’ ( 1977 , p.136 ) .
19 Church music , he said , was ‘ both apt as well to quicken the spirits as to allay that which is too eager , sovereign against melancholy and despair , forcible to draw forth tears of devotion … able to move and to moderate all affections ’ .
20 Thus contracts are not generally binding on the following people : persons who at the time of making the contract were either minors , or so insane or drunk as not to know what they were doing .
21 William Dale claims the honour of being the first to reproduce it accurately in his Tschudi the harpsichord maker of 1913 : previous reproductions were so murky as almost to obliterate the harpsichord .
22 Publicly Mr Bush remains as determined as ever to force Iraq out of Kuwait , with no concessions .
23 As Oxfam enters its 50th year , it 's as determined as ever to improve their quality of life .
24 As Oxfam enters its 50th year , it 's as determined as ever to improve their quality of life .
25 They said of Dr Barnard that from fragments so minuscule as almost to deceive a magnifying glass he could reconstitute a bomb to the point of identifying the factory that made its components and the man who assembled it .
26 It is , of course , difficult as yet to say whether or not these fears are unduly alarmist or exaggerated or even groundless .
27 It is difficult as yet to relate these views to changes in the map of factory employment in Britain ( critical as they are in political economy ) .
28 He prayed to build on his aversion and include Ariel herself in his disgust ; it was not as difficult as before to force himself to keep his distance , because he was angry at the child 's existence , the visible emblem and consequence of their unlawful coupling , and he wanted to punish Ariel for not using her clever arts to prevent the baby coming .
29 These fragments were Klenow end-labelled and isolated as before to produce two groups of three probes with 140k binding sites in circularly permuted positions with respect to their ends .
30 Adaptation to a changing environment may be necessary as before to achieve traditional goals .
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