as
(adverb)
to the same degree (often followed by `as')
All clip examples
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Looks as if you were still, well...
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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Oh, it's not as bad as all that, brat.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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I'm not afraid to think as I choose.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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Oh, but anyway, do with this as you think best.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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Even if we were married, I'd think as I pleased.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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She only runs as fast as she can to another phony like you.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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It isn't quite as simple as all that.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
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And there aren't very many little girls who would be as ungrateful.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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About as much as you can hold without busting open.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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There's half as many baths as there is rooms.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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There's half as many baths as there is rooms and if, and if the two... - That's all right.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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It's almost as personal as a toothbrush.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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You impressed me this morning as a man who would bet on anything.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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It ran as far as that gate. Now it goes down to the edge of the river.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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You would too, if you'd spent as much time as I did in hotel rooms.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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It was as if my aunt had never died. He took her place.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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It doesn't pay as much as the New York job.
(The Last Time I Saw Paris)
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There are not very many women who would be as patient and as kind.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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Well, it was a rush job anyway, and I'm rushed enough as it is.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
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I bet I smell as nice as you and Walter put together.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)