Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv] as [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A sense of loss of identity causes the voyager to project what he or she encounters so as to perceive it as an external phenomenon , and also to introject elements of the familiar world in order to recreate a recognizable context .
2 Above : Sparkling Crystal Gold finish from Mazda 's Images collection looks just as appealing when bulbs are not lit .
3 The pre-modern relationship which prevailed for centuries has just as enduring an influence .
4 Not everything goes exactly as planned .
5 We interpret everything that happens here as happening to the man we met in the living room who is now at a club .
6 HSE 's director-general , , said : ‘ Law that is fussy or demands unnecessary detail is ineffective and also gives too many opportunities to consultants and others to exaggerate what it requires so as to get themselves business — quite a problem at present . ’
7 A policeman 's job is made more difficult if a person physically obtrudes so as to prevent the policeman from arresting a third person , and it has been held that such conduct constitutes obstruction .
8 It stays exactly as arranged . ’
9 are not susceptible of any … precise definition as would be necessary to give them utility as practical tests , but amount to the features of different specific situations which , on a detailed examination of all the circumstances , the law recognises pragmatically as giving rise to a duty of care of a given scope .
10 Current will flow via resistor R to charge up capacitor C and the voltage V c rises exponentially as shown .
11 In some quarters the inadequacy of pitches presents just as terrifying a prospect as the pace of the bowling .
12 When using HP paper as much pastel falls away as sticks to the sheet .
13 ‘ did unlawfully , wilfully and ’ This point means intentionally as opposed to accidentally and unlawfully as opposed to lawfully such as an artists ' model .
14 The court 's inability to determine those matters is not limited to the period pending the visitor 's determination but extends so as to prohibit any subsequent review by the court of the correctness of a decision made by the visitor acting within his jurisdiction and in accordance with the rules of natural justice .
15 A traditional definition of idiom runs roughly as follows : an idiom is an expression whose meaning can not be inferred from the meanings of its parts .
16 A typical discourse , then , proceeds roughly as follows :
17 His argument runs briefly as follows .
  Next page