Example sentences of "as [adj] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It 's eight years — firstly as assistant then as coach — of quite a lot of enjoyment .
2 They came up with a mock chat show programme in which Williams was being interviewed by Clement Freud , as lugubrious-looking then as now .
3 Whose penis was said to be as damn near as big as his guitar ?
4 They 're twice as polite now since that review in the Observer .
5 These homemade videos are often as rough-looking inside as they are on the outside .
6 This is not to say that the share of overseas assets reached a peak in 1989 Q4 ; it simply implies that the conditions for investment are relatively free in that any remaining controls can be thought of as prudential rather than prohibitive .
7 But he points out that recent high points must be put into context : ‘ The current colour magazine campaign began in 1980 and is as strong now as then . ’
8 It 's curtain up time again , another opening of another show and the Smell of the Greasepaint and the roar of the crowd is as strong now as it ever was for the performers .
9 Here are to be found squares and terraces as distinguished architecturally as in other British cities , and shopping streets which have been precincted and pedestrianised .
10 Widcombe Manor , with all its crisp carving on pilasters , columns , quoins , swags and urns , is as fresh today as when it was built — perhaps by the Bath mason Thomas Greenaway as it is a fine display of all the decorative details he could do best .
11 Johnny Tillotson 's Poetry in Motion , Lesley Gore 's It 's my Party , Cliff Richard 's Move It , the Ventures ' Walk Do n't Run , Eddie Cochran 's C'm on Everybody … all sound as fresh today as they ever did .
12 Classifying by mother 's country of birth results in babies of , for instance , Pakistani mothers born in Britain appearing as British rather than Pakistani .
13 She was not otherwise positively ill-looking , though anxious , meagre , of a muddy complexion , and looking as old again as she really was .
14 Eventually one will see this as interesting rather than demoralising .
15 The house is as interesting inside as out , having a collection of about 70 stuffed birds .
16 Gerbier , for instance , says on window design that they ‘ must be as high again as wyde … ’ and that their mouldings needed ‘ the broad brim of a good hat to a travaileur on a rainy day ’ .
17 Appreciably bigger than Skipton , High Wycombe , as the leading town of Buckinghamshire , contained a solid merchant class which made per capita wealth there half as high again as in the villages of the Chilterns where really rich men were thin on the ground .
18 Choose the position of the brackets so that the end bracket is as high up as possible and the lowest point of the gutter ( at the outlet position ) is not more than 50mm ( 2in ) below the roof drip .
19 It was considered as wrong then as it is now to embezzle the Crown 's revenues .
20 There is music for the vernacular liturgy of the 1559 Book of Common Prayer , and a handful of pieces probably intended for use as the extra-liturgical anthem ; this was composed for the vocal chorus available at the Chapel Royal and the greater corporate churches , and virtually alone among Byrd 's output qualifies as public rather than domestic music .
21 This very popular music with its haunting , melancholy and often monotonous melodies is sung in Madeira but has never become as popular here as it is in Portugal .
22 Mushy peas are believed to have originated in the North and remain as popular today as they have ever been .
23 We are committed to ensuring that this reputation remains as sound tomorrow as it is today .
24 Racial politics were as distasteful then as now but were as the government put it " part of an essential compromise " .
25 Her mocking laughter sounded as clear now as it had done months earlier .
26 Yet it was as impossible now as it had always been , and she groaned .
27 They had been as contented together as could have been expected , he supposed , from a union which had been largely one of convenience and accommodation ; and he would always remember , with a sort of perverse affection , her rather loud voice , her over-daubed war-paint — and , of course , the painful state of those poor feet of hers …
28 ‘ It 's not as simple now as signing a contract with somebody , ’ says Phillips .
29 ‘ The Police generally support us on this , but I have to say the problem does not seem quite as serious now as it used to be , and they did not mind us frequently playing Saturday games last season . ’
30 Adults tend to dismiss as worthless much that their children read , while having a nostalgic affection for similar material read in their own childhood .
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