Example sentences of "[vb -s] [pron] of a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Its atmosphere has something of a European town square about it , albeit taken inside and miniaturised .
2 Nevertheless , The Logic of Fantasy has something of a two-world structure of its own .
3 The dissociation produced by this procedure constitutes something of a theoretical puzzle .
4 The eclipse , late on the 9th , represents something of a cosmic milestone , especially if you 're an early June birthday .
5 This decision represents something of a final throw .
6 This seems to be true in spite of the fact that Spinoza was very much of a generation which was concerned to dissociate itself from the Greek inheritance , and indeed he represents something of a fresh injection of Jewish moral feeling into the main Christian current of Western thought .
7 In many of these sonnets the poet accuses himself of a gross failure in judgement in having formed a relationship with this woman .
8 Fairly early in Take a girl like you , Patrick delivers himself of an unqualified condemnation of women , which is followed by a sentence from the narrator concerning and presumably condemning Patrick 's attitude to Jenny at that stage , as a girl to be taken and left : ‘ He wanted more than his share of her before anybody else had any . ’
9 This seems something of a disappointing conclusion because some other work has proffered a reorganized approach , in particular either by focusing upon the environment theme or upon the urban environment , which has been covered by Urbanization and Environment ( Detwyler and Marcus , 1972 ) by Urban Geomorphology ( Coates , 1976c ) and by The Urban Environment ( Douglas , 1983 ) .
10 Of course , you can run the programs in a DOS window , but it seems something of a regressive step .
11 My heart tells me of a perfect flower in the centre of the garden and I move along the pathways , stopping to drink in some new and dazzling sight or scent that arrests me .
12 He tells me of a great battle his ancestors fought near Lake Victoria .
13 A FRIEND tells me of a post-electoral poster war which has broken out in his salubrious street in north Kensington , London , quite different in tone from the good-humoured gobbing on one another 's doorsteps which characterised neighbourly relations during the three weeks preceding the day that the revolution failed to dawn .
14 When the whole structure is still , as it were , in two parts we have a noun phrase such that there is no reason to suppose that it has the property of the adjective ; when the structure is united we find first , that the property of the adjective does apply to the noun phrase , and , second , that the verb tells us of a temporal change .
15 She reminds me of a small animal at bay .
16 Michael reminds me of a cardboard version of Prince ; his experiments with pastiche and his fusion of pop and soul make him an eclectic chap , but a dull one .
17 This latter award reminds me of a key feature of being the best and that is teamwork .
18 He is well-dressed , superficially well-mannered , but reminds me of a flirtatious married host at a barbecue .
19 This talk of laughing all the way to the bank reminds me of a delightful line from Shakespeare :
20 ‘ Huh , with those blue eyes , the tan and the toothpaste smile , he reminds me of a game-show host . ’
21 In a way the sound reminds me of a small-bodied Gibson from the '30s or '40s , but with more volume and a clearer bass end .
22 The lip reminds me of a sun-split tomato .
23 Is n't that funny that reminds me of an old girl I had at Dennis House the one I used to be on i I used to have to get her in bed get her all propped up and then
24 It can also in effect make it impossible for them to participate in the community and thus deprives them of an important aspect of citizenship .
25 A dissident intellectual passing out leaflets at a factory gate reminds him of a nervous child offering a sugar lump to a large horse .
26 It is in this sense that Derrida argues that Husserl 's Origin of Geometry sets up ‘ the possibility of history as the possibility of language ’ whereby ‘ difference would be transcendental ’ : writing , in the general significance which Derrida gives it of a differential marking , must be the condition of any historicity .
27 STEPHEN BROADBENT from Gloucester reminds us of a useful way of getting the best of both worlds .
28 None of this excuses their behaviour , of course , but this is an unusually human account of an all-too-human encounter in the streets which reminds us of a certain constancy of human motive , and of conflicts built around the human meanings that are attached to the social realities of class , physical appearance and territory .
29 And although ratings have dropped since the show began airing regularly , Twin Peaks remains something of a national passion .
30 What strikes him of a sudden , as he remembers this experience , is how it had been foreseen and marmoreally recorded by Virgil : as Virgil 's Aeneas left doomed Troy , carrying his household and ancestral gods , so Pound leaves the doomed Rome of fascist Italy , carrying in his haversack his gods — books by Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and T. E. Hulme and Percy Wyndham Lewis .
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