Example sentences of "not [adv] much [conj] a " in BNC.

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1 ‘ If you 'll pardon the correction , not so much as a million , ’ said one of the lady lodgers .
2 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 .
3 Doctor Tinsley , my old medical man , absolutely forbade me to lift any kind of weight , not so much as a shopping basket . ’
4 I have gone through this procedure in some detail , not so much as a practical guide as to how to make the arrangements , but to demonstrate how much practical activity surrounds someone 's death .
5 For there grow no Trees , no not so much as a Shrub on St. Kilda ’ .
6 Having seen taxis north of Adrar , and then a couple of days ago , a convoy which had not so much as a compass , I had begun to think the desert not so terrible after all .
7 It 's quite possible that people shunned us not so much as a mark of outrage at what we had done , but to avoid the frustration of not being able to satisfy their curiosity about what exactly it was .
8 Charles had done all he could to slow down the retreat , issuing orders that ‘ not so much as a cannonball ’ was to be left behind — an instruction literally , and profitably , followed by the Glengarry clan who , when the carts transporting ammunition up Shap Fell , between Kendal and Penrith , broke down , carried it up in their plaids , at sixpence [ 2. 5p ] per cannonball .
9 I began to see the city , not so much as a cityscape , but as a still life made up of street lights , buses , cars and shop windows .
10 I BEGAN TO SEE THE CITY , NOT SO MUCH AS A CITYSCAPE , BUT AS A STILL LIFE MADE UP OF STREET LIGHTS .
11 The affair started not so much as a head-first plunge as a mesmerised topple .
12 Nigel Lowson , however , now head of geography at the £9,150-a-year Tonbridge School in Kent , remembers Tim not so much as a staid , jolly , reliable type as a chap with a sense of humour .
13 Not so much as a sociology essay , or an urban character sketch in London 's Evening Standard .
14 The ducks gazed thoughtfully at the sky and flapped their wings , but not so much as a peep was uttered by any of them .
15 I began to see the city , not so much as a cityscape , but as a still life made up of street lights , buses , cars and shop windows .
16 I BEGAN TO SEE THE CITY , NOT SO MUCH AS A CITYSCAPE , BUT AS A STILL LIFE MADE UP OF STREET LIGHTS .
17 The French Dragoons crossed the frontier with drawn swords , but the weapons served no purpose other than to dignify the moment with a suitable melodrama , for there was not so much as a single Dutch customs officer to oppose the invasion .
18 This means that history can be theorized not so much as a contradictory process but as a concept that must enact its own contradiction with itself : ‘ this difference is what is called History ’ .
19 But by not so much as a flicker of an eyebrow did he betray his emotions .
20 The new Association is best seen not so much as a pressure group founded to further the professional interests of teachers of English , but rather as a class-based mobilization which drew in not only most professors of English Language and Literature , but also like-minded politicians , administrators , and " men of letters " .
21 Not so much as a mention .
22 It is above all the body , enveloped in sound , in dance , that stands at the cross-roads of popular music and leisure time ; here the word ‘ Love ’ that is omnipresent in the pop lexicon reads not so much as a romantic cliche but as a coded entry into the world of the private , into the world of pleasure and self-discovery .
23 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 .
24 Not so much as a titter , ’ Lydia answered her , breathing deeply .
25 It is come , I know not how , to be taken for granted , by many persons , that Christianity is not so much as a subject of inquiry ; but that it is , now at length , discovered to be fictitious .
26 Not so much as a stick of rock . ’
27 For large areas there is not so much as a pebble bed to make one stumble in the climb up the column .
28 Better than some , in fact , since he had once had West Riding connections and , as young political agitators went , possessed a relatively unblemished reputation , with not so much as a single term of imprisonment , as yet , to be used against him at the hustings .
29 He gave in that connection some instances from The Rock , which he described not so much as a play as a revue , a word he pronounced in the French manner .
30 No roads , no villages , not so much as a solitary building , not even an animal .
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