Example sentences of "[adv] a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The females , however , continue upstream a considerable distance .
2 At the top of the pillar , the 26-year-old guide picked up a new sack of food and popped across to the Freney face to solo a new direct version of the Central Pillar ( Chris Bonington 's finest hour ) .
3 Furthermore a higher proportion of blacks were acquitted after trial , which again suggests insufficient evidence .
4 Furthermore a strong case can be made for arguing that religious commitment is the only way to understand the depths of religion which from the outside may remain sheer enigma .
5 Furthermore a difficult transition can prejudice the changers against the new method so that they never appreciate its superiority over the old method .
6 What the fuck did that matter , better a live queer …
7 Punchbag Better a has-Beam than a never-was
8 Hopkins advised against sending reclaimed prostitutes into domestic service because of the danger to middle-class sons : ‘ better a thousand times that this fearful social evil should be localized in certain spots , which we call dens , than by our hasty and injudicious benevolence it should be struck into the very bosom of our families . ’
9 He did that at the Hope ( Close : He improved three times , but would have had to better a 63 to do it every round — 76-68-67-63-69 ) .
10 This is sometimes regarded as old fashioned thinking , unfortunately , and it 's a shame , for although clothes do n't actually make you perform better a good comfortable appearance does give the panel a chance to see how you see yourself and how your body uses clothes .
11 Better a tough general in charge , was their argument , to ensure the stability of the US-Panama relationship , than a weak civilian regime unable to control nationalist hotheads .
12 Better a little fish in a big pond than the other way round ? ’
13 But the speaker had raised waste as a defence of private enterprise , as an implicit attack on government economic policy , suggesting that the state could only better a free market by open or hidden subsidies .
14 Better a steady flame than one that flares up and burns itself out . ’
15 Better a researched decision than a random one .
16 Such a move was clearly designed only to better a bad situation rather than remedy it completely , since it would be expected that the availability of refined sugar would be subject to the same seasonal fluctuations as availability of gur , and there is little reason to suspect that refined sugar was more readily available than the ( unrefined ) gur .
17 Better a sleek elegant automobile than an ugly box on wheels .
18 Suddenly a loud horn blast pieced the air , a thin strident note pregnant with urgency .
19 But suddenly a squat campesina is waving me to follow her .
20 Suddenly a young man wearing a full-face motorcycle helmet rushed up behind me and stuck a revolver in the security guard 's face .
21 The remaining men were just preparing to leave when suddenly a young man called Laban Tall rushed into the malthouse , almost too excited to speak .
22 Then suddenly a wide grin split his face .
23 Suddenly a portentous atmosphere has been established .
24 Now that she had to leave it , the cellar was suddenly a friendly place .
25 And suddenly a sharp pain as if stabbed in the gut .
26 Suddenly a sharp blast of high pressure air rushed downward from the engine , ’ she said .
27 Suddenly a tall , broad-shouldered man was standing in her path , arms extended , glowering down at her with all the wrath of hell .
28 Suddenly a blond boy of about three darted through the door … and the precious hope in Kerry 's heart died .
29 Suddenly a low , mocking laugh rang out in the corridor , and she jumped as though she 'd been shot , her heart racing as she looked round into scornful green eyes .
30 To the feral reek of buffalo , horse and fowl and the sour remains of human nourishment was added suddenly a smoky , faintly ammoniac odour of female flesh , entirely new to him .
  Next page