Example sentences of "set against a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 That would mean 54 or 55 MPs out of 650 , to set against a proportionate entitlement of 76 or 77 .
2 A single regional band could not be applied to Yorkshire , with council tax prices set against a regional band for , say , London and the south-east .
3 Yet , such criticism has to be set against a long-term investment programme — including direct job creation — worth four times the value of the federal payroll cuts .
4 The argument is easier to appreciate when set against a non-monetarized society .
5 Those wingborne came only in historic aircraft and the flying display was a vivid expression of the joys of classic aircraft set against a near-perfect sky and on a landing ground new to the late 20th Century .
6 So often , his solo melodies , set against a stark and sombre accompaniment , sound like a voice crying in the wilderness .
7 A tiny grubby finger will be pointing at a poor pen-and-ink line drawing of a ‘ polecat with young ’ , set against a blue number seven .
8 This hotel is set against a pleasant backdrop of tree-covered slopes .
9 Giverny is an Art Nouveau design inspired by the flowers from Monet 's famous garden , using bright florals set against a deep background .
10 Gabriela Sabatini had to battle through a tough second set against a determined Conchita Martinez on Sunday to win her second consecutive Family Circle Magazine Cup at Hilton Head , South Carolina .
11 The subject had been explored in The Trumpet-Major and stories such as ‘ The melancholy hussar of the German legion ’ but it now began to take shape as a verse drama of epic proportions in which the historical story of Napoleon 's rise and fall was set against a reflective commentary on man 's ‘ place in the universe ’ .
12 Baldwin 's reluctance had therefore to be set against a formidable opposition which had been allowed to solidify and organize itself in his absence .
13 Bold stripes in any one of six colours are set against a crisp white background .
14 It is generally argued , however , that the meaning " world " of is a post-Biblical development , and a mere possibility in the relationship of parallelistic lines ( " greater precision " ) can not be set against a linguistic certainty .
15 When covered in a mantle of snow , set against a clear , February sky at the pyramidal Pen-y-ghent looks every part a real mountain .
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