Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] a [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Beside the school stood the little school house , and beside that a row of small cottages .
2 ‘ It must seem impossible for you to believe that in a civilized society so abhorrent a practice as the enslaving of one person by another still continues , but I will ask you to try and imagine what it must be like .
3 In the case of the miller 's wife : ( She had not had so pleasant a time for many a long year )
4 Her hands were often plastered , while there was one occasion when she made so fiery a contact with a clubface that she punched one of the knuckles out of position .
5 As hydrogen bonds are thermally labile a rise in T reduces the number of bonds and causes eventual phase separation .
6 There is some merit in the Royal Commission 's reasoning , but it does not seem to warrant so total a separation of the two branches of the profession as exists currently .
7 If this is the case , the argument for so narrow a definition of sexual intercourse would seem hard to sustain .
8 Indeed some observers thought this a major reason why the Conservatives won by so narrow a margin in October .
9 This was clear in ‘ Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme ’ , which was so memorable a success at our 1985 Festival .
10 Much of this picture has been surmised from the pioneering excavation of Old Hangleton by Mr Holden : surprisingly , given the common image of medieval squalor , there was none of the rubbish which is usually so rich a ground for archaeologists .
11 The fact that Paris was so rich a source of books — from de luxe manuscripts to ‘ soiled tracts and battered codices ’ — in part stemmed from its position and reputation as the greatest northern European centre of learning .
12 China was even worse : ‘ I was sorely grieved that heathendom had so strong a hold over [ this rich country ] , ’ he wrote after a few weeks in Qanjanfu .
13 He learned to use his charm , and ‘ it became ’ , his biographer says , ‘ so strong a factor in him that it resembled great beauty in a woman ’ .
14 The word pirate was perhaps not so strong a term of condemnation as in later centuries : European rulers were only just beginning to acquire for themselves , on behalf of their states , a monopoly of the use of force .
15 In the last resort the only satisfactory answer to the question , ‘ Why do you devote yourself to the attempt to understand ? ’ is , ‘ Because I derive so strong a satisfaction from doing so . ’
16 ‘ You know , you ca n't believe she 's the same child that was so polite a couple of years ago .
17 How can a country which is so deeply intolerant of sexual differences in real life offer so raucous a welcome to such creatures ?
18 This is why fiction , including children 's fiction , is so irreplaceable a form of human knowledge .
19 After all Dr Kugelmann recommended Karlsbad to so untypical a member of the middle class as Karl Marx , who carefully registered himself as a ‘ man of private means ’ to avoid identification , until he discovered that as Dr Marx he could save some of the rather steep Kurtaxe .
20 And so , despite the undeniably galling aspect of being asked to rejoice in so meagre a victory after decades of hammering on the hallowed portals of power , I believe it would be foolish to look this particular gift-horse in the mouth .
21 To have continued to be so dependable and at the same time so exciting a batsman for so long , shows him to have been one of the greats of the game .
22 So I mean there are other advantages , and the answer is that in in in the long term you are getting your name down for one , so clear a space on your desk
23 Eye surgeons had learned to cut the ligament with complete success , but it was so different a procedure from the rest of the operation and so incompatible with it that they often dreaded it .
24 I also had odd ends of three cones of that random yarn that was so popular a number of years ago .
25 It might destroy part of the ozone layer , which would permit the sun 's ultra-violet radiation either to tan us or fry us , depending upon how large a hole had been blasted in the stratosphere : it might equally well cause the onset of a nuclear winter , which is so popular a topic among both scientists and laymen these days .
26 Perhaps this a characteristic to be expected of a country where it is said that one person in every three is a civil servant and that it requires 72 government permits to open a mild bar .
27 His voice was n't its usual fulsome boom , and probably only carried down half a mile of corridor .
28 It does n't give you a hangover if you remember to get down half a pint of water before you go to sleep .
29 The hundred shares index closed down half a point at twenty-eight , twelve point six .
30 One reason given was ‘ to teach that there is no place void of Divine Presence , even so lowly a thing as a bush ’ ( Mishnah , Exodus Rabbah , II , 5 , quoted in Cohen , 1949 : 9 ) .
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