Example sentences of "but [adj] as [art] " in BNC.

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1 To the Queen , Cranmer was not only detestable as a heretic but odious as the man who had arranged her mother 's divorce ; he had however been legally consecrated as Archbishop by order of the pope , and only the Pope could hand him over for judgement and punishment by the civil power .
2 Within Spanish art itself , on the other hand , the line is almost too simple : Goya was intensely aware of Velázquez , Picasso of both , but for Gironella the problem is not just that Picasso could be seen to have inserted himself into the next place in the sequence but that as a Mexican an unequivocal position in any such art-historical lineage is utterly unattainable .
3 It is not the case that whenever we become a member of a civil society , a body politic , that we are so to speak signing the social contract erm think of it erm a little bit like erm a social club erm East Biddock Old Comrades Club was actually established in the way Locke describes , you know , a group of citizens of East Biddock came together and decided to establish a social club subsequently of course all sorts of people are admitted to membership of East Biddock Old Comrades Club but that as a process which , although very similar to the original contract of establishment , is n't actually erm the same , you know , they 're not actually re-establishing the civil society , they 're joining one that already exists .
4 It is suggested that the controls constitute a necessary conceptual framework , and presumably have some practical impact on behaviour by providing a normative code for the guidance of management and a public standard for the evaluation of their conduct by others , but that as an enforceable control mechanism their effectiveness is very limited .
5 But responsive as the G60 's engine is , it lacks the immediacy of the Calibra 's and emits a distant but characteristic whine from the compressor .
6 In essence , the description of the reflex pathway is a miniature narrative but generalised as a typical activity by the use of the present tense whereas a fictional narrative is almost invariably reported in the past tense .
7 If rigorous logic had been followed , no payment at all would have been made for the transfer of development value to the state but this as the Uthwatt Committee had pointed out , would have resulted in considerable hardship in individual cases .
8 What right has he in me , but such as a thief may plead to stolen goods ?
9 One of his friends who was called John ‘ she heard during the introductions , was as beautiful as Larry , but dark as a panther , cool as a wooded river .
10 He was a good player but bald as a coot .
11 John Heritage , an avant-garde poet , reveals the heart of a Rassendyll when Saskia appears to call forth his chivalrous pity ; her absent fiancé Alexis , toughened by circumstances as an exile in Australia , is as regal and remote a figure as the villain Paul Abreskov , impelled to crime through the bitterness of physical imperfection but magnificent as a ‘ lost angel ’ .
12 But pricey as the drinks at Kamieniolomy are , they are nothing compared to the girls .
13 The man they wanted was a New Zealand-born heroin tsar , sought in a dozen countries but slippery as an eel .
14 From the onset of the first Five-Year Plan , if not before , social equality has not only been sidetracked , but forsworn as the object of policy .
15 Not a language-teaching text , but useful as a source of authentic reading material covering technical terms and regulations associated with various import-export operations , eg methods of payment , inspection , records , cargoes , insurance .
16 Firstly , my children and older grandchildren want copies and , secondly , the writings may be not only entertaining but useful as a framework of speeches for others at a loss for what to say . ’
17 But this low-born de Burgh , this double man despite himself , even while he leaned back greedily , hankering after lands with the ambition of the landless , even while he envied the de Blundevilles and the Marshalls and composed about himself a synthetic replica of their hereditary splendour , yet saw England by glimpses as Isambard saw it , an empire not decomposing and falling to insecure tatters like the Emperor 's sprawling hold , but compact as a clenched fist , solvent as a Jew 's treasury and self-sufficient as a well-run manor , a power not hemmed in but completed and transmitted by the sea .
18 He valued ceremony , too , perhaps as a barrier , negotiable when desired , but inestimable as a means of maintaining distance during a parley .
19 Age-specific mortality rates ( usually in 5-year age groups ) are interesting in themselves but cumbersome as a means of summarizing death rate patterns .
20 But Luke , she remembered , had been four years old , tall for his age but thin as a stick and pale with excitement , that day , at the journey to Manchester , the speeches , the exalted , psalm-singing atmosphere of the crowds .
21 ‘ She 's certainly not four , but bright as a button .
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