Sentence examples for something of a combination from inspiring English sources

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Mundine's personal narrative, on the surface, comes off as something of a combination of Ndamukong Suh and Ali.

The village's 18 bakeries now produce over a third of a million kilos of it - something of a combination of ciabatta and sourdough - per year, some of which is sent straight to Madrid.

Something of a combination of lacrosse and handball, it is played in a three-sided court, called a fronton, with a small ball thrown against a wall and returned on the rebound.

The situation for eastern Europeans is something of a combination of the two: Agents there frequently place ads in the dailies of Prague, Budapest and Sofia, say, and hook up illegals who must find their own way to America with situations after they arrive.

Crystal is something of a combination of Jackie Mason with heart and Woody Allen with warmth, mixed with the physical expressiveness of Sid Caesar; picture a Jewish Steve Martin.

Similar(54)

All of this is a shame, because the concert gave every indication that theirs was something of a winning combination.

A slump in implied volatility matches the activity of option traders who sold options at surrounding strike prices creating something of a strangle combination.

And, as the same article points out, NASA has "conducted research on climate change," making for something of an awkward combination.

Whichever it is, something is very wrong with the world economy.That something is a combination of faltering growth and a rising risk of financial catastrophe.

In truth, the preservation of the reef is something of a success story, a combination of active government intervention and the beneficial effects of responsible tourism .It used to be deemed that tourism was the enemy," says John Rumney, manager of the Undersea Explorer, a ship that combines eco-tourism with scientific research.

On Saturday, a wall of lava barreling toward the coast hit the ocean, pouring into the water and shooting up massive plumes of something called "laze": a combination of steam, hydrochloric acid (which burns through skin), and tiny particles of glass, the Washington Post reports.

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