Example sentences of "be just as much [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Getting used to an all-female environment must have been just as much a shock for Eva .
2 The reason for this is that the circumstances of the situation are just as much a cause of behaviour as the underlying motive .
3 They are just as much a product of the youth system as any youngster from the FA School of excellence though — so I reckon were OK to gloat about them in future years : - ) )
4 ‘ Well , if they 're trying to imply it was one of us , you 're just as much a suspect as I am ! ’
5 There , I would be just as much a stranger , but they would have to define themselves against me as natives against incomers , or in terms of social classification .
6 To forget the existence of pure science and mathematics and pure research in these disciplines is to misunderstand the nature of knowledge itself , and would be just as much a corruption of the idea of education and learning as would neglect of philosophy and other arts subjects .
7 That Kevin is certainly growing into a fine young man , he has been working with his shirt off in this weather and you can see he is going to be just as much an athlete as his father was .
8 Ideas and institutions were just as much a part of the ‘ given ’ facts of European society between 1880 and 1914 as were geography , or political and economic structure , but they are much harder to measure .
9 These were just as much a part of family life as the healthy , celebrating adults and children earlier in the procession .
10 A person who is mentally handicapped is just as much a member of society as anyone else and , like anyone who possesses a disability or impairment , is entitled not only to the same rights and services as society as a whole , but also to special needs and facilities which Britain , as a relatively affluent nation , should be able to provide for the care of disadvantaged people .
11 His extraordinary achievement is just as much a triumph for his mother .
12 Praying and saying little is just as much a way of counting on God as preaching and saying too much .
13 More to the point , the assumed divinity of the nineteenth-century novelist was only ever a technical device ; and the partiality of the modern novelist is just as much a ploy .
14 Now , as she romps in the garden of their Georgian home in Grayswood , Surrey , this energetic nine-year-old is just as much a part of the Nicholson family as Mike 's wife Diana , 50 , and his two grown sons Tom , 20 and William , 19 .
15 Both prominence and deviance have a negative , as well as a positive side : a feature which occurs more rarely than usual is just as much a part of the statistical pattern as one which occurs more often than usual ; and it may also be a significant aspect of our sense of style .
16 ‘ We do n't always get what we want , ’ she answered with clipped control , ‘ and learning to deal with that is just as much a part of the Christian life as any other experience . ’
17 And that every man , woman and child who is killed during this conflict , by bomb , epidemic and starvation , is just as much a casualty of war as a marine or a pilot .
18 The small town cafe which finds Kentucky Fried Chicken or McDonald 's producing crippling competition in its own area , is just as much a victim of these trends as ICI , Shell or Unilever .
19 Arthur Scargill is just as much the devil incarnate to the true blue supporter now as he was in the front line at Orgreave Colliery .
20 It is just as much an abuse of the process of the House for opposition to seek to talk out or filibuster , as it is for government to stifle opposition .
21 Peasant conservatism is just as much an ideology to the planner as the greater public good is to the crofter If way of life is natural and familiar , ideology is contrived and foreign .
22 The amoeba is just as much an animal as the elephant .
23 None of this mess was of her making , yet she was just as much a prisoner as if she had been in gaol like Clive .
24 In Keen v Parker [ 1976 ] RTR 213 it was held that a sidecar designed for the carriage of goods was just as much a sidecar as one which carried passengers .
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