Example sentences of "[adj] as [art] [noun sg] on " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He paused for a moment , ‘ Not as exciting as the landing on the morning of 6th June ? ’ |
2 | After morning service , when the last of the footsteps , and voices exchanging greetings , had died away , she heard the vicar ride off , the clip-clop of the horse 's hooves as clear as a bell on the cold air . |
3 | For Christ 's sake , M' lud , the matter 's as clear as the loincloth on the Crucifixion . |
4 | That he was high as a kite on Ecstasy and had thought they were larking about ! |
5 | All next day she called and she hunted , but no trace of her baby could she discover , not so much as a footprint on the sand . |
6 | For there grow no Trees , no not so much as a Shrub on St. Kilda ’ . |
7 | They had n't been hurt , not so much as a graze on them , yet when the all-clear sounded , they came out of their buildings and stood on their street with blank eyes that seemed to stare inwards . |
8 | There is no attempt to weight the votes — a vote on whether the marigold should be the national flower counts as much as a vote on an arms limitation treaty . |
9 | But when she quickly added a white lace fichu and a long , lacy shawl , the effect reminded her of nothing so much as the icing on her daughter 's wedding cake . |
10 | As much as the mite on the bee 's mouth parts knew about the rest of her body , or about the throbbing hive . |
11 | An indication that the issue is not quite as straightforward as the focus on reduction makes it seem can be gleaned from the high moral tone which pervades the discussion . |
12 | It was still as gloomy as the day on which she had first seen it and she longed to transform it into a place of splendid elegance . |
13 | He knows sod all about football and , talk about stingy , I wish the defence were as tight as the clasp on his wallet . |
14 | The big wooden table had been scrubbed as white as a bone on the seashore . |
15 | Tess 's face went as white as the snow on the ground . |
16 | The answer is as obvious as the sign on a streetcar — it is a business man . |
17 | He had been a cheerful fellow in those days and life was as inconsequential as a laugh on the wind or the carelessly squandered words of a song . |
18 | Although it was taken by many as an attack on history as such , it was the critique of Marxist historicism initiated by Althusser that enabled new political possibilities in this direction . |
19 | The key was the institution of a density control based on a normal limit of floor space five times as great as the plot on which building was to take place . |
20 | Levy 's voice is as rough as a shag on the floor of a sandpaper factory , the lyric is utterly ridiculous , describing the popularity and stylishness of a certain fashionable item , and the soprano sax added to that tender little guitar lick from the Arrested Development record just upsets your soul . |
21 | His patient , a girl whose age was uncertain — he judged her to be about fourteen or fifteen — was at the moment quiescent , her face as grey as the linen on which she lay , her eyes closed . |
22 | ‘ OK , ugly duckling , take all the time you need , but I insist on force-feeding you that sangría before we leave : you 're as uptight as a barnacle on a boat 's bum . ’ |
23 | It was as plain as the nose on his face . ’ |
24 | She could see , as plain as the nose on her face , that here was a man of the self-centred , philandering , dangerous variety , the kind of man no girl in her right mind would risk getting involved with … so how come her hormones were letting her down in this maddening way ? |
25 | And then he 'd lock the doors to the reception block , and he 'd retire to his back room and make himself as small as a child on his bunk in the corner . |
26 | Yet , as she watched him , perched as lithe as a cat on the prow , leaning back out over the waves to balance the little craft , his splendid chest scattered with little beads of water , Ronni was aware that she did n't really mean it . |
27 | I was as helpless and as degraded as the pig on the bench at the top of our garden nearly thirty years ago . |
28 | Here a Kalashnikov in the back is as common as a delay on the Northern Line . |
29 | Katherine had been as excited as a child on Christmas morning . |
30 | a tin of beans in the south will cost the same as a tin on beans in the north . |