Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [vb pp] as in " in BNC.

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1 Though not expressly so stated as in the case of criminal appeals where there is a criminal legal aid order , it seems that a civil legal aid certificate will also cover advice on appeal .
2 Rarely , however , have these two benefits been so effectively combined as in the new DOUBLE PAYOUT PLAN from Reader 's Digest .
3 Rarely can St Augustine 's dictum that bands of brigands are but petty kingdoms without justice ( City of God , iv , 4 ) have been so easily comprehended as in the eleventh century .
4 Never was the enormous authority of this machine for living in ever so well expressed as in this scene of picturesque desolation .
5 For example , there is no development of an intra-mandibular joint , as occurs in Herrerasaurus and other theropods , and the external naris and the narial fossa are not greatly enlarged as in sauropodomorphs .
6 In practice , the PPP theory is not usually expressed as in ( 7.4 ) in terms of price levels , mainly because of the difficulties involved in determining an appropriate base year for computing the price-level indices .
7 Nevertheless , the large number of organisations involved and the fact that their activities are not centrally co-ordinated as in Northern Ireland , suggests that there may be scope for confusion or conflict between them .
8 However , once well established as in the three-year-old toddler , Stages and 4 slow wave sleep occupy about three sleeping hours , reducing with age in the same way as REM sleep .
9 It seems probable that rebellion in East Anglia was as rigorously suppressed as in Kent .
10 Magazine profiles may be carefully written and prepared , though their facts are unlikely to be as thoroughly checked as in books .
11 The heavy stuff masks the whole body , but the structure is as clearly realised as in the Peplos kore ( fig. 39 ) .
12 Almost without exception , the visitors who turn up this road do so having heard or read of the ‘ parallel roads ’ , a remarkable geological antiquity found in other Scottish glens but nowhere as clearly defined as in Glen Roy .
13 Nowhere is this as clearly illustrated as in the struggles of black workers and in the way in which white workers have aligned themselves with the bureaucracy . ’
14 The thirty-four English clubs examined by Tony Mason were mostly run by smallish groups of substantial shareholders , though shareholding was sometimes quite widely distributed as in the case of Woolwich Arsenal with 900 manual workers holding shares in 1893 .
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