Example sentences of "was [adv] [adj] [prep] any " in BNC.
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1 | This was remarkably quick by any standards . |
2 | Cripps , for instance , admitted that he " was bitterly opposed to any such alignment a year ago " . |
3 | It appeared to me that an aircraft accident investigation was fundamentally similar to any other type of inquiry , whether legal or scientific : it should establish the relevant facts , discuss the evidence and draw conclusions . |
4 | In such circumstances the inspection was little different from any other local inspection . |
5 | For Trotsky the Soviet bureaucracy was little different from any other in its regulatory functions , its maintenance of social ranks and ‘ its exploitation of the state apparatus for personal goals ’ ( Trotsky 1936 , p. 248 ) . |
6 | The Albanian Communist Party was in favour of the adherence of Kosovo to Albania after the liberation , and the Yugoslav Party was adamantly opposed to any loss of prewar Yugoslav territory ( although insisting on the Italian surrender of Istria ) . |
7 | The expanse of beach was so denuded of any trace of the present century we might have stepped out on to a distant planet . |
8 | A lieutenant of Dragoons was so dismissive of any danger that he was eagerly telling his Sergeant how the new science of phrenology measured human aptitudes from the shape of a man 's skull . |
9 | It was a branch which was highly resistant to any tendency perceived as likely to vitiate the traditional autonomy of WEA branches . |
10 | De Michelis said that he was entirely innocent of any malpractice . |
11 | But this was entirely different from any of those and seemed , somehow , attractive , wholesome , propitious . |
12 | But Hurley himself was apparently unmoved by any such fear . |
13 | It was the only time I was ever frightened on any of the Rambles . |
14 | The narrow-minded and mean-spirited Emperor was specially severe on any who injured the name of his father , or any member of his imperial family . |
15 | For the ‘ planning of developed areas ’ ( redevelopment ) for example , we read : This was hardly encouraging to any local authority , nor suggestive of a planning system which could deliver much . |
16 | The room was not the best the hotel had to offer , but it was still magnificent by any standards . |
17 | Paris was more convenient in any case ; the memories of St Cloud were too painful … |
18 | Once inside , Belinda noted with relief that it was lit mainly by the dim , warm yellow of candles in the centre of each table , which would soften the contours of her figure and save her from a self-consciousness that was probably unnecessary in any case … |
19 | In the Roman world it was probably responsible for any expansions which occurred in trade and equally for any constraints that existed . |
20 | It was also important for any aspiring young gallant to give good parties . |
21 | That proposal had perished in the face of determined opposition from the Social Democratic Party of Japan ( SDPJ ) which was vehemently opposed to any symptom of incipient Japanese militarism , and which had traditionally disputed the constitutional legitimacy of the very existence of the SDF . |
22 | A Farnham Lane resident who did not wish to be named said that he was strongly opposed to any footpath being opened up to traffic . |
23 | He was particularly scathing of any suggestion of romanticisation , invoking the later , revised view of Engels of criminals as parasites on their own class and ideologically and politically at odds with the worker 's movement towards socialism . |
24 | He was particularly careful of any involvement with the Mamur Zapt , which was why Owen not only reported formally to the Khedive but was nominally subordinate to Garvin . |
25 | Ernest Bevin , the new Foreign Secretary , was particularly suspicious of any form of European political integration which he thought would be easy prey for continental communist parties [ Bullock , 1983 ] . |
26 | For both of them the landscape in which they now stood was quite unrelated to any of this . |
27 | She was quite unaware of any comparison to her own condition . |
28 | If an offence is committed and the employer was quite unaware of any defect he is still liable for ‘ using ’ ( Green v Burnett [ 1954 ] 3 All ER 273 ) . |
29 | Such an expressed provision carries the inference that contact may well become appropriate after the six-month interval and was quite contrary to the conclusion of the local authority that contact between T. and her father was quite inappropriate in any circumstances presently foreseeable . |
30 | However , a much publicised speech delivered by Schach on March 26 was almost devoid of any political content , and the Israeli media consequently concluded that Peres 's efforts to woo the rabbi had failed . |