Example sentences of "so much [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 It is worth speculating on whether , from the locals ' point of view , the proliferation of village organizations reflects not so much a flourishing of community life as a symbol of its downfall .
2 It was n't so much a case of thinking : he looks a lovely chappie .
3 Indeed , it is not so much a case of them accompanying the AIB team members as of them being part of the team .
4 Your selection of wayward notices ( 27th November ) reminded me of one I saw in my hotel in Frankfurt — not so much a case of bad translation , as a question of logic .
5 It is , then , not so much a case of ellipsis occurring in informal speech as of writing requiring a degree of elaboration that is not necessary in informal speech .
6 It is not so much a case of Captain Bob as of Major John and Petty Officer Newton .
7 It was not so much a case of social science theories being senseless , misguided or absurd , but more to do with their serious lack of evidential support .
8 However , jailing Shields for three months , Sheriff William Fulton told him : ‘ It is not so much a case of stealing from this house as plundering it , ransacking it and leaving it in an awful mess .
9 It was not so much a case of Glasgow getting worse as one of the rest of the country improving faster .
10 Though Masonry was always to be an element in the liberal forces — particularly in later non-socialist brands of Republicanism — it was never again , as it was from 1815 to 1820 , its chief framework ; even then it was not so much a system of belief as the only clandestine organization available for conspiracy .
11 His treatment of the " Alliterative Revival " is in some ways reminiscent of earlier treatments which argue that later alliterative writing in English reflects not so much a continuation of OE principles ( which language-change would in any case have made unlikely ) , but a re-invention from a tradition of alliterative prose-writing which began with AElfric .
12 And what was tending to happen here , as the Scottish Typographical Circular regularly reported , was not so much a division of labour between women on straight setting and men on other processes , but rather the diversion of certain kinds of typesetting from the linesmen ( male piece-workers ) to the women , who were not only paid much less but who were also considered by some employers to be actually better at it .
13 It 's not so much a lack of generosity — a real miserliness .
14 She was so much a daughter of the vicarage in accent , manner , and appearance ( her father had been a clergyman ) that without being told I had assumed , seeing evidence in Mrs Browning 's home that someone at some time had lived in a hot country , that her husband had been a missionary .
15 Punch is certainly one of the great British institutions , and has become so much a way of life as to make it impossible to imagine a world without it .
16 Perhaps not so much a way of life , but what Wittgenstein called a ‘ form of life ’ : small and privatised world-views binding on the group and consisting of accepted social practices , group norms and common languages ( by the latter I do not mean natural languages like French or English , but a nomenclature or group argot ) .
17 It is another pointer to that ambiguity which is so much a characteristic of his life and work , in which the essential orderliness and formal morality of his upbringing clash with his more libertarian — and sometimes libertine — impulses and imagination .
18 Since political bias was so much a characteristic of the press we might expect its influence to be more apparent in terms of attitudes than perceptions , however .
19 ‘ When you travel round the world , and being brought up in a family like mine , you learn that what happens on the field is actually very important to people elsewhere , and you feel , perhaps not so much a sense of responsibility , as a sense of focus in which people identify nationally for the best kind of reasons , and are made aware of who they are and what they came from .
20 The male body was of little aesthetic interest to him , and the female was so mutable , so much a function of its own motion , or that of light across it , that all static representation seemed to him doomed from the outset .
21 In the work of Bottomley and Coleman ( 1981 ) criminal statistics are so much a function of highly variable administrative practices that they seem almost incapable of telling us anything about anything .
22 The degree of risk created by the bad driving should be regarded as the crucial factor ; it is not so much a question of whether the sentence should be more severe when the risk eventuates , as whether the sentence should be more lenient when the risk does not materialize .
23 When the economic crisis became severe , community mobilization became not so much a question of participation in decision-making as practical support to keep schools and education projects going .
24 However , Ms Callil says that overall it is not so much a question of bigger profits , as ‘ less loss ’ .
25 This has been not so much a question of exegesis but of hermeneutics , searching for the underlying meaning and background to the understanding and belief in the demonic world ( see Carr 1981 ) .
26 It 's not so much a question of pushing the music as finding the way to let it pull the listener through .
27 Clara could not explain to the school that it was not so much a question of finance , as of her mother 's instinctive opposition to any pleasurable project — and anyone could see that a visit to Paris could not possibly fail to entail more pleasure than instruction .
28 It is not so much a question of what is promised as of the attitudes of those who will implement the decisions if the Tories are successful .
29 The headlights — so much a feature of the E-type — will be rounded and unusual in design again , though details are sketchy .
30 It is not so much a problem of hardware development outpacing software , or vice versa .
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