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

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 This time , it was so unheralded as to appear almost artificial .
32 Bathrooms and modern amenities were added to them all but great care was taken to ensure the original character of the buildings was retained , and in fact the original ambience has been left so intact as to produce a veritable living museum of simple , rustic life as it used to be .
33 One collective line of approach adopted by the GCC was to put forward a draft resolution to the UN Security Council , so worded as to highlight the Iranian role in endangering shipping , while remaining silent on that of Iraq .
34 Sometimes a problem is so worded as to involve two successive questions , but the second question logically arises only if the first is answered in a certain way .
35 There will be found a wealth of information in all kinds of forms — from details of sites which have been excavated and studied , to actual examples of materials used , given that they have been sufficiently durable as to survive .
36 More importantly , the financial and time pressures on heads of houses have become so acute as to leave little appetite among senior publishing people for taking on additional responsibilities .
37 Firstly , we have ‘ a state of affairs that is so acute as to constitute a danger ’ — and , we would add , a moral challenge of a scale which makes it one of the most pressing social issues of the day .
38 This case falls within ( a ) : the school was so over-subscribed that to admit all the applicants would have prejudiced the provision of efficient education .
39 But something did delay her ; she stopped and stood to stare at a marvel of nature , so strange as to suspend belief .
40 Some larger churches can be so impersonal that to think in terms of ‘ joining ’ is as meaningless as joining the cinema !
41 Given the brief span of their acquaintance , the even briefer time they had actually spent together , how could he have been so presumptuous as to imagine that she would wish to fly out and join him at the Plaza ?
42 He was so subtle as to deceive even the quickest witted people .
43 Boniface made claims which were so large and so tactless as to produce enemies like dragon 's teeth , and the French king 's own ambitions eventually drove Boniface into Edward 's camp .
44 The theme is so persistent as to invite analysis .
45 The position of one second tier company , Tyne-Tees , was so weak that to save costs it ‘ affiliated ’ with the network company Yorkshire TV within a joint holding company , Trident .
46 Not for the first time , Beth asked herself how she could so readily condemn David for being so weak as to love someone who had treated him in such a callous and despicable manner , when she herself was guilty of the very same weakness !
47 That , as may be said in tones suitable to the objection , is the conception of something so complete as to necessitate by itself its effect .
48 A passion so intense , a caring so complete as to make all other feeling insignificant .
49 It was widely held that the Koreans would not be ready for independence when the war ended : memories of the closing phase of the Yi dynasty did not inspire confidence in Korean ability for effective government and the era of Japanese dominance had been so repressive as to necessitate a period of readjustment .
50 In any case , his use of search was not so extensive as to merit using a large number of firms .
51 Burial and fossilization changes are often so extensive as to obscure the primary modifications which must be identified in order to understand the mechanisms of accumulation of the bones .
52 Surely such a sensible little bird , a bantam so civilized as to sit gently and happily on the head of a human child , should have known that her removal from an ill-chosen resting place , in the wilds of hazel and rhododendron , was for her own good and safety ?
53 For those tenants who become so dependent as to require more intensive care than can be reasonably provided in sheltered housing the survey asks : " Are they to be " bolstered up " by extra warden support ( and other sources of help ) or are they to be transferred to more appropriate settings ? "
54 ‘ Having made such a botch-up on coal , it is amazing that the Government have been so bloody-minded as to push on full steam ahead without prior consultation with the industry and regardless of a potentially devastating impact on jobs . ’
55 It is so clear that to look into it takes your breath away : there is no sense of depth and the rocks could be two or twenty metres away .
56 The core question of the case , as far as this paper is concerned , was , whether the Defendants had failed to comply ‘ with the statutory requirements and whether the guidelines are reasonable or sufficiently clear as to provide adequate guidance to personnel employed by the Defendants in their maintenance and preservation of federal records ?
57 Finally , the concept was a formula for expressing the fact that , in our system , ‘ the principles of private law have … been by the action of the Courts and Parliament so extended as to determine the position of the Crown and of its servants ’ .
58 Not so foolish as to put your head in a noose .
59 ‘ It 'll also be the judge 's — if you 're so foolish as to go ahead and fight me . ’
60 ‘ I am not myself convinced that the Government will be so foolish as to go so far as to privatise water .
  Previous page   Next page