Example sentences of "like a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The wind threatened to pluck him like a ripe orange off a tree . |
2 | He 's dropped like a ripe plum into your hand and you fail to recognize the possibilities . |
3 | A badly-balanced packet of tapioca crashed from shelf to floor and burst open like a ripe seed-pod . |
4 | I went on being sick , my stomach starting to hurt badly now ; my eyes were full of tears , my nose was running and my whole head felt like a ripe tomato , ready to burst . |
5 | And his face like a ripe damson . ’ |
6 | He would be seeing Caterina again , with her sweet face like a ripe apricot and her almond eyes , and he laughed when he remembered her childish stumblings as she tried to repeat the message to the letter . |
7 | He knew that in this berserk state those horns could open him up like a ripe melon . |
8 | The yellow nylon shirt with the frothy frill amounts to an offence against taste bordering on the criminal , yet it somehow works to offset his complexion ( pale blue ) and the ensemble enables him to come on like a chat-show host from Hell — vast smiles and arms flung out in gestures of mock formality . |
9 | I smell like a major operation . |
10 | In the late 1970s and early 1980s , the home computer boom looked like a major consumer success in the making . |
11 | What is not at all clear is whether one highly visible target — incineration — is anything like a major ingredient in the pollution cocktail , even at Pontypool . |
12 | Er but in actual fact , it 's like a major thing here , but he did very well . |
13 | Every area you look at South Africa in a report I gave to the Norwegian government which they commissioned we pointed out every area is like a major disaster area as if you 've been hit by an earthquake in every area of human activity and that situation needs something like a martial plan if we are , a martial aid plan , if we 're to address it but in the world we live in there 's no prospect of such assistance coming to Southern Africa . |
14 | She had fought him off like a veritable wildcat when he 'd slung a few well-deserved insults at her , and then had had the gall to deny she had turned traitor , although her brother held his castle for Matilda , and God only knew what she , herself , had done for the Empress . |
15 | Ven queried , as well he might , she realised , for she 'd been chatting to him like a veritable magpie all evening with not so much as a hint of shyness . |
16 | Of course , I fought back like a veritable lion but my sword and dagger were in the garret and who in the tavern would listen to my screams ? |
17 | And earth replies all night , like a deep drum . |
18 | THE surface of the tongue , magnified above , is like a deep pile carpet , trapping halitosis-causing bacteria . |
19 | There was silence then , like a deep gasp . |
20 | The pool filter usually looks like a deep tray . |
21 | Those who , like Iris Murdoch , speak of a ‘ selfless attention ’ to others as a supreme mark of virtue — hard to achieve and harder still , as a duty , to discount — surely imply something like a deep security of inner being . |
22 | She listened , still half drugged from sleep , straining her ears intently , a touch of uneasiness making her blood begin to pound like a deep sea-swell in her veins . |
23 | If subsequently a critical incident happens which is pertinent to the individual 's particular dysfunctional assumption , then , rather like a key fitting into a lock , the dysfunctional assumptions are activated . |
24 | The protein part of the LDL reacts with another protein in the membrane of the tissue , where the cholesterol is to be off-loaded , rather like a key fitting into a lock . |
25 | Sounds like a practical start . |
26 | No one entered Harry Short 's house without an invitation and to find Kelly Connor of all people sitting across the breakfast table was like a practical joke in very poor taste . |
27 | Above all there is a smell of great ordinariness and naturalness that I should recognize anywhere in the world like a familiar voice . |
28 | Sounds like a familiar blueprint from a previous decade . |
29 | The route passed through a wood and George was off like a Baldersdale-bred hare . |
30 | Karen took something from her handbag and slipped it into her mouth like a communicant self-administering the host . |