Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The main function of nematode haemoglobin is thought to be to transport oxygen , acquired by diffusion through the cuticle or gut , into the tissues ; blood-sucking worms presumably ingest a considerable amount of oxygenated nutrients in their diet . |
2 | As Mr Hart himself asked in a letter to The Times : ‘ In the face of so pellucid a Parliamentary intention , how was it that the Revenue not only thought it worth while to try it on , but actually found two courts to agree with it ? ’ |
3 | It is necessary to turn back to Ezra 's childhood to find a key to that dire impatience which has led him into so strange a spiritual home as Fascist Italy . |
4 | He was excited by the ferocious vitality and darting breadth of reference of the work , and secretly , personally , he was rather pleased that all this had been achieved out of so peaceable , so unruffled a private existence . |
5 | Peter Brown in his most recent and profoundly important book Body and Society demonstrates movingly how sexuality had so different a social meaning from what it now carries that the sexual abstinences , the noisy and sometimes virulent demands for chastity and virginity , within the early Church , far from being a symptom of self-hatred and dualism , were a radical political claim to the coming of the Kingdom : a claim which women , sometimes even more than men , could make . |
6 | Most Paris-club countries prefer the less generous ‘ enhanced Toronto terms ’ , which cancel only half a poor country 's debts contracted before a certain date . |
7 | Bob went on from there , season in , season out , to the end of 1931–32 , by which time he had made 293 League appearances for Crystal Palace ( a club record at the time , but of course they did not make much of such things in those days ) and even today , almost 60 years later , there are fewer than only half a dozen Palace men who have played more times for us than that . |
8 | She banged his head on the till , slamming his hand in the drawer , and he ran off with only half a 20 pound note . |
9 | Naturally such a prolonged absence was a little worrying , especially in view of , well , the circumstances ; and in fact an anxious Ashenden had rung Kidlington a few minutes previously , just in case the police knew anything . |
10 | Perhaps such a renowned centre of healing was allowed a quiet death by financial strangulation , though the dumping of domestic rubbish in the holy precinct may indicate desecration . |
11 | It 's is not er er so much a lost leader , it was an incentive negotiated into the contract for industry to make progress . |
12 | The political ambitions of the CLB can be deduced from its interpretation of the Edwardian crisis : ‘ At so critical a period in British history as the present , when there is so great and unfortunate a tendency to slackness , ease , and carelessness as to religion , morals , and work , when there is so great a craving for pleasure 's sake , when so serious a social problem as the great army of the unfit and unemployed has become a national scandal and a public danger ’ , it was necessary to provide men of the future with ‘ that spirit of self-denial , self-control and definiteness of righteous purpose ’ which had put Britain in the lead among nations . |
13 | The energy generated from running upstairs and laughing with Stella in distant Florence flowed over into the impulse to ring , in turn , her own mother : a pointless act , but one that nevertheless in the context seemed pious , necessary , propitiatory , and a gesture at least towards her sister , who bore so much heavier a filial burden , who would ( in theory at least ) be pleased to know that Liz had remembered . |
14 | Earthly life is inveterately complex ; of all natural materials , only water could bring together such a rich variety of elements , so conveniently , as this life requires . |
15 | This is obviously such a small probability that we have n't the faintest hope of duplicating such a fantastically lucky , miraculous event as the origin of life in our laboratory experiments . |
16 | The Wedding Present were long overdue a thorough overhaul when NME 's Steven Wells got his hands on them early in 1987 . |
17 | But I found in the city centre , that er I did enjoy working there , but it it can be a bit of a cold and unfriendly place because it 's so such a rapid pace of life . |
18 | True , but few produce so amazing a second flush in late autumn or early winter . |
19 | So obvious a structural fault must be easy to diagnose and put right . |
20 | The Christian Dior route is to calmly evolve and constantly fine-tune a modern image . |
21 | Business was so good a new home had to be found when the Comedy had to go on to other previously arranged bookings . |
22 | Okay so good a capital letter on there yeah . |
23 | Never before had there been so savage a fiscal squeeze ; not since the thirties had there been a comparable increase in unemployment , now approaching 3 million . |
24 | Of course ; so famous a young lady would make instant bookings . |
25 | It has been suggested that because Rolle does not make use of Richard of St Victor 's fourth stage , insatiabilis the love that can never be satisfied because of the inexhaustible nature of God , he did not in fact enter so profound a mystical experience as others . |
26 | But if it 's brilliantly sunny a blue sky day the moon can be up as well but because the s because the sky is so light anyway you ca n't see the moon . |
27 | Rarely has so important a constitutional bill staggered towards enactment so inelegantly . |
28 | Yet this is no reason for ignoring what , taken as a whole process , is so general a social fact . |
29 | Where today , one wonders , would a visiting celebrity be allowed so unceremonial a ceremonial meal , and one with so much character ? |
30 | Never before had Ramsey run up against so formidable a Christian opponent , and never before been so forced to defend his biblical ideas . |