大学英语四级常用短语 so much as that
释义:
so much as that 到如此程度以致…
例句:
I don't think the problem is that we don't set boundaries so much as that our kids are constantly wanting to renegotiate them.
我认为问题不是我们不设边界,而是孩子们想要不断的讨价还价。
It is not so much that construction is now shrinking, so much as that construction remains in a shrunken state.
For all her professed patriotism, however, the issue isn't that New York is so much flyer than London, so much as that Winehouse's trainwreckery has squandered whatever goodwill she once claimed in the colonies.
If Vertex wins, it may not be because it had a better drug so much as that it found a smarter way to study it, in a way that will make it easier for patients to take.
Mr. SCHWEITZER: Well, we had to prove that it was both unique in terms of climate and topology, that there was a history of being called the Ramona Valley and that there were grapes growing here, not necessarily that there was any wine industry so much as that it was possible to grow grapes in the Ramona Valley.
So much so that as the project continued I continued to let greed get in the way of providing the right kind of service to my client.
Not that anyone in regulation ever had even so much as an inkling that the whole rating biz was just a tad conflicted when all those uppercase letters and minus and plus signs were being awarded.
Another possibility is that you get so much as return of capital that your tax basis shrinks all the way to zero.
He can do well in relatively low-cost elective matters like Lasik eye surgery or cosmetic dentistry, but not in the high-price emergency situations that cost so many times as much and that virtually all of us eventually face.
Oiticica was not concerned with material culture so much as the ways that performance, playfulness and ritual define Brazil's visual landscape.
It is not so much that America is ungovernable, as that Mr Obama has done a lousy job of winning over Republicans and independents to the causes he favours.
The author explains that wreckers were not so much vicious as desperately poor, and that coastal communities saw ships' cargoes as theirs for the taking because they would otherwise be consigned to rot on the seabed.
If the former communists do slow down privatisation they will do so as much out of fear that national assets will fall into Chinese hands as out of ideological principle.