Example sentences of "[adj -er] [conj] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | His trunks , largely buried between the rolls of his stomach and thighs , were red-purple , a colour neither heavier nor lighter than his achieved flesh colour , which jangled the eye . |
2 | ‘ A highlighter — two tones lighter than your normal foundation — can define cheekbones , make eyes look bigger and slim down a nose merely by being blended into these areas . |
3 | The most flattering effect is no more than one to two shades lighter than your natural colour . ’ |
4 | Searchers not only express their subject needs in brief and concise terms but also tend to use a broad search formulation to access the bibliographic tool , i.e. , broader than their expressed topic . |
5 | It gives you a level of control over the configuration that is cleaner and quicker than anything DR-DOS offers in its question and answer CONFIG.SYS functionality . |
6 | He was taller than most of them , his nickname being ‘ Lofty ’ , and always looked a lot cleaner than his oil-stained gang . |
7 | As we said our goodbyes and hoped to meet up again soon , I could n't help thinking as I watched the column disappear in the distance that the Marines were not going to find the situation any easier than their last venue . |
8 | As a result of the centrifugal force of rotation it bulges at the equator and its polar radius ( 6378 km ) is 21 km shorter than its equatorial radius ( 6397 km ) ; thus the Earth is more accurately described as an oblate spheroid . |
9 | A small brownish butterfly with a lifespan of less than a week and a wingspan shorter than your little finger . |
10 | Jonathan cut his media molars as part time religious affairs producer at TFM Radio : the 30 seconds to which ITV Sport restricted the newcomer was slightly shorter than his usual address . |
11 | Fen was much taller and broader and his swarthy colouring was not something that had appealed to her hitherto . |
12 | Less advanced learners would want something much shorter because their limited command of the language also limits their attention span . |
13 | He says that walking is easier when his two friends help him . |
14 | A second body was the Protestant Dissenting Deputies which had been founded in 1732 and was , by the end of the nineteenth century , healthier than its older friend although The Christian World noted in 1901 that it ‘ seems to have fallen on evil days ’ . |
15 | Postal workers in the eastern Länder , whose salaries were 60 per cent lower than their western counterparts , went on strike on Jan. 24 in support of demands for a one-off payment equivalent to a 13th month 's salary to compensate for increased living costs . |
16 | The price of most raw materials fell by fifty-six per cent ; foodstuffs by forty-eight per cent and most of the manufactured goods had to be sold at thirty-eight per cent lower than their previous prices . |
17 | ( In 1977 , 88 per cent of unemployed men received benefits that were at least 10 per cent lower than their previous earnings , according to DHSS data . ) |
18 | The rules on incorrect scores are simple and Draconian : if you sign for a score which is lower than your actual score you are disqualified ; if you sign for a higher score than your actual , the higher score stands . |
19 | A hush — he was talking — Cameron and Menzies strained to hear but caught only his tone , several notes lower than his sharp pitch of command . |
20 | Lisa slept like a stone in the big double bed — far comfier than her own bed at home — and awoke to find Emily already up and dressed , pulling on her green rubber wellies . |
21 | Often makers try pulling a fast one by giving a tractor a number that 's bigger than its actual horsepower . |
22 | This can be represented by a context called Title with a property that its font is two points bigger than its containing font . |
23 | These have a slightly wider range of shapes and are often much bigger than their wooden counterparts but much lighter . |
24 | Instead they simply enlarged until , by the time that the caterpillar was full grown , they were vastly distended and many thousand times bigger than their original size . |
25 | Wilma finished the session by cantering into four foot fences and popping over them as if they were no bigger than our two foot nine ones — which made me realise how far we have to go . |
26 | Furthermore , by broadening his own identity from leader of the London dissidents to leader of the whole French Resistance , internal as well as external , he remained , in a sense , bigger than his own organization . |
27 | But the negatives , each no bigger than his little fingernail , were totally meaningless to the naked eye . |
28 | ‘ I opened Keith 's shirt and saw a bullet hole just a little bigger than my middle finger nail . |
29 | Such a particle is heavier than its new surroundings and thus tends to fall back to its original level and then overshoot . |
30 | This surprisingly compact machine is more expensive and slightly heavier than its corded rivals , and we feel that a dust extraction option should have been included . |