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grammaire anglaise > formes > formes comparatives > as ... as
as + adjectif + and + adjectif + as + adverbe
as magical and mysterious as ever
as + adjectif + as + proposition (SV / SVO)
Arab Spring Generation 'Not As Scared As Their Parents Are [ Scared ] Of Change' December 22, 2020 NPR
as + adverbe + as + proposition (SV / SVO)
We'll mess up the system as much as we possibly can." http://www.iht.com/articles/528596.html
as + adjectif + as + N
'She might look as cool as a cucumberwhen she gives evidence, but the recording might show her dishevelled and distressed,' Harman told backbenchers.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2003/apr/13/
as + adjectif + topreposition + N + as + N
Your ZIP Code Might Be As Important To Health As Your Genetic Code
http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/08/04/
autres énoncés
Gerard Batten, a 50-year-old former corporate salesman for British Telecom, is about to become a member of the European Parliament, one of 12 such members-elect from the United Kingdom Independence Party whose paradoxical goal is to destroy the organization they were elected to. Obviously, we don't believe in it," he said over the phone this week, referring to the Parliament. "We'll vote against everything we can in protest. We'll mess up the system as much [ adverbe ] as we possibly can."
Europa: Hoping to wreck the EU from inside Parliament,
Harriet Harman, the Solicitor General, is now studying plans for police routinely to film women when they first make a complaint - usually shortly after the attack - and show the recording when the case comes to court, perhaps months later, to underline the severe impact on the victim. 'She might look as cool [ adjectif ] as a cucumber when she gives evidence, but the recording might show her dishevelled and distressed,' Harman told backbenchers.
Jurors
could see videos of rape victim interviews,
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