Example sentences of "[was/were] [adv] [pron] of [art] " in BNC.

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1 Marx provided the bones of an analysis of marriage as female domestic slavery , although he was personally something of a rearguard romantic ; Weber argued for sex-equality within marriage .
2 It was nevertheless something of a relief to find Fordham notably unmoved by such distant calls to glory .
3 Having had three reviews printed and received a veiled death threat from The Godfathers , I was already something of a celebrity in my native Wigan when I took the train to Commonwealth House .
4 But of course Mary Armour was already something of a veteran by then .
5 Even so , with water in normal supply , locking at Foxton takes an hour or more ; slow working was always something of a disadvantage .
6 He was always something of a showman and sought to attract extra revenue by utilising the tramway as an attraction : to this end he introduced Illuminations tours , reintroduced the Circular Tour and created new feature cars , attracting commercial sponsorship .
7 To imagine that the revived realism of the 1950s and after excluded other possibilities , then , is to misunderstand its nature , and the chauvinism of the school was always something of a pose .
8 In the wake of Watergate and other scandals , the pejorative connotations of the imperial presidency gained added weight , but the concept was always something of a cliché .
9 Despite its new coat of paint it was still something of a relic , something of an enigma , resembling , in its apparently purposeless massiveness , some strange arrangement of stones on the site of a vanished civilization .
10 After all , Luke was still something of an unknown quantity , and she had to be sure of her ground when the right moment came , otherwise he would annihilate her .
11 Her face was still something of the colour of a ripe apple , and her silvery hair shone with cleanliness as did the pink scalp beneath it .
12 There was school , and a lot of sport , and time spent in the mountains ; but music was clearly something of a priority .
13 His early arrival was clearly something of an inconvenience to his lordship and his colleagues who had reckoned on a day or two more of privacy for their preparations .
14 There was practically none of the systematic planning and oversight which so characterised Bath and many other spas : that could only come from the implementation of a single plan by a great landowner and architect , and Brighton had a few of these .
15 Pat McGibbon senior now reckons his wee lad was probably something of a visionary .
16 She was also something of a femme fatale , with the looks of a young Marlene Dietrich , and a blasé manner to match .
17 It was also something of a reassurance to conservative waverers frightened of political radicalism ; the Council was committed to evangelization of the Christian gospel .
18 ‘ Nationwide circulation ’ was also something of a fiction .
19 Meese was also something of a hard-line conservative , ever alert to any dilution of the faith or any hint of disloyalty to the president .
20 He was also something of an entertainer .
21 Now Spike , apart from being an excellent navigator , was also something of an amateur Met man and would quote yards of Pick ( an authority on Met forecasting ) at anyone who would listen , and at first he could not believe that we were in an icing situation .
22 Not only did diplomatic services grow slowly in size : there was also none of the inflation of titles and wholesale upgrading of missions which was to develop after 1918 and still more after 1945 .
23 He said that what the Faculty was proposing was really none of the IoT 's business and he objected strongly to its interference .
24 Of course the word NEW was now something of a misnomer .
25 It did not sound like a threat ; there was even something of a promise about it .
26 It was actually thirty million was n't it of a claim for fifty million , of which there was also a secondary claim which was dropped .
27 Thom could safely be publicly discounted as an eccentric ( he was indeed something of an eccentric in many of his personal habits ) and a generally irrelevant gadfly , but it was rather more difficult to depict Hawkins 's computer in the same light .
28 Sometimes she remembered Thomas 's parting words to her and thought that perhaps she was indeed something of an innocent .
29 Already prone in his diaries to use the superlative it was indeed somewhat of a problem in trying to entice people to see the beauties of the Lake District , not to use repeatedly such expressions as ‘ the grandest view of all ’ , ‘ one of the finest assemblages in England ’ , over and over again .
30 Debts were carried on to the next account ; there was certainly none of the easy attitude of the old 17th Century German masters who regularly wrote workers ' debts off .
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