Nationalizing the airline industry is a far cry from comprehensive economic planning and totalitarianism. |
|
Computer hard drives and printers are a far cry from the nib pens and inkwells of Fairymount National School 100 years ago. |
|
This is only stop-gap funding, however, and it's a far cry from what the Coast Guard says it needs to operate in a shipshape manner. |
|
But it sure was a far cry from the civility and warm kindness he showed me during that other party. |
|
She said today's nappies were a far cry from the terry towelling nappies boiling on a stove and the need to juggle metal pins. |
|
Tracking big game in the heat of the southern African bush is a far cry from the cold, grey bulk of Yorkshire's oldest stone fortress. |
|
Even so, this is a distinctly more nobby Sonata than anyone has seen, a far cry from the upper-echelon mini cab that it formerly was. |
|
The ancient rivers and lakes were teeming with life, a far cry from the dry moonscape of the site today. |
|
The building he envisages for the association is a far cry from the dingy, dark hovel it occupies now. |
|
The filthy back streets of Victorian London are a far cry from the bright lights of Tinsel Town. |
|
A nice attractive business district around the station was a far cry from Detroit. |
|
It is a far cry from first half of the 20th century when going to the pictures was an integral part of a town's social activities. |
|
Self-assured and well coiffed, with square geek-chic glasses, he's a far cry from the stereotypical pasty and ponytailed tech jock. |
|
The sort of place they envisage Bradford becoming is clearly a far cry from the rather uninspiring face it currently presents to the world. |
|
For Mrs Bulloch, 30, her role as shop manager is a far cry from her previous job as an air hostess. |
|
It was definitely a far cry from his simple bowl of soba and the smell was quite mouthwatering. |
|
They are a far cry from the people that surrounded me when I was a member of the Liberal party. |
|
It will be a far cry from North Sea Camp open prison where inmates have keys to their own rooms. |
|
This is the fifth generation of the Sonata and it is a far cry from the first generation model I found so tempting. |
|
Lama's upbringing was a far cry from his current life as an animal rights activist. |
|
|
It's a far cry from the message that went out last month when licensing officials urged landlords not to rush applications. |
|
Those sentiments are a far cry from her early years when she had an altogether more ambivalent attitude towards her singing. |
|
It is a far cry from the gap-toothed, giddy, baby smile he wore as an infant, or the giggly grin that he wore as a toddler. |
|
Although ideologically-motivated negligence is damnable enough, it is a far cry from intentional and explicit support for mass murder. |
|
A far cry from Keijo's spooky, noise-laden pastiches or Islaja's feral moan, Growing Green is subtly pastoral. |
|
This is a far cry indeed from the Anzac's credo of self-mocking mateship and chiacking comradeship and two-up and beer shouts. |
|
It's a far cry from last season when they narrowly avoided the drop with victory against Bournemouth on the last day. |
|
It is a far cry from the touring luxuries of the bands they have supported. |
|
It's not quite shocking or sordid enough to fit in the hentai tradition, and its visual style is a far cry from traditional anime. |
|
A far cry from its humble beginnings, the toasted cheese sanger has made a heart-stoppingly welcome return. |
|
Wesleyan University's student organizations are a far cry from the glee clubs and debate societies of yore. |
|
For dessert, buttermilk panna cotta sprinkled with citrus wedges and toasted pine nuts is a far cry from mom's tapioca. |
|
The entertainer sported a curled bob, a far cry from her usual flowy locks. |
|
It's a far cry from the 1970s and 80s, when the Royal borough indulged in an orgy of office building. |
|
Her new career is in catering, a far cry from the committee rooms and party politicking at City Hall in Bradford. |
|
It is not a far cry from thinking a person is beneath one's station to thinking a person's function is beneath one's station. |
|
That's a far cry from the traditional temp-placement process, which typically requires hours of telephone tag. |
|
The FBI envisioned the massive overhaul plan as a far cry from the G-man of J. Edgar Hoover's day at the agency as the agency director. |
|
Although the sums paid are by no means small, they are a far cry from what the jet set pay across the water. |
|
A far cry, I suggest, from the usual fleapits he inhabits, such as the Hotel Tivoli in Luanda. |
|
|
A far cry from when they were at college and what they imagined upon graduation. |
|
This is a far cry from last year's parade where a man was stabbed to death on the route. |
|
It is a far cry from the days when girls did domestic science and boys did woodwork or metalwork at school. |
|
Exploits on foreign soils seem a far cry from everyday life in Carlow town but that is what several men and women must put to the back of their minds everyday. |
|
This is a far cry from the 50s and 60s, when California abounded in new owner-occupied single family homes. |
|
An all-around great guy, no doubt, but a far cry from the stories we tell our children today. |
|
The Levant is already a far cry from the cosmopolitan melting pot it once was. |
|
This is a far cry from Corbon's more simplistic description of the Eucharistic canon as prelude, liturgy of the word, anaphora, communion, and finale. |
|
Even then, it would be a far cry from enslavement, where everything produced is stolen by an outside power. |
|
It was a far cry from the sendoff for Gen. Colin Powell in a 1993 ceremony that drew two presidents and the defense Secretary. |
|
But early vampire myths were a far cry from the sleek, cloaked version Stoker described. |
|
Of course, it's a far cry from most of the low-key balladry of the rest of the album, and when the final verse appears, this fiery, chaotic vision suddenly seems distant. |
|
Just a couple blocks from Columbia University, jin Ramen is a far cry from the instant noodles found in dorm rooms across campus. |
|
Massage techniques are also a far cry from the Thai or Swedish variety found in most vacation destinations. |
|
Affirming papal authority in that context is a far cry from triumphalism. |
|
It was a far cry from the shrimpers' boat George had grown up on. |
|
Most of his income comes from unemployment benefit, a far cry from the sums being earned by those who have jumped on the game's financial gravy train. |
|
These powerful images are a far cry from Scottish artist John Finnie's 1864 idealised Maids of All Work, looking blithe and bonny in crisp cottons. |
|
The Abu Shouk camp, on the outskirts of the provincial capital, Al-Fasher, is a far cry from Ismail's village, where he says houses lie in ruins and the fields unplanted. |
|
It was a far cry from her life in Cairo and its Europeanized royal court. |
|
|
Gould Farm is a far cry from Reid's former life working on Wall Street, an existence that also included psychiatric hospitals, traditional therapies and halfway houses. |
|
However, their absence from the charts was a far cry from a trail of failed hits, remnants of creativity run dry. |
|
It's all a far cry from the formality and overblown camp of Sketch. |
|
This room was a far cry from the sleek black leather furniture set, sterling silver end and coffee table, and colorful pop art gracing my penthouse apartment. |
|
It was the third successive year that she had been hailed as the world's best on the sport's greatest stage, a far cry from her days as a carpenter and joiner. |
|
It is a far cry from the hectic, impersonal atmosphere of a hospital ward. |
|
It is a far cry from the zany globetrotter of his stage shows. |
|
It's a far cry from her early career as a cryptographer with the RAF in Cyprus, a posting that saw her in the middle of shoot-outs. |
|
It's a far cry from the well-padded, cocky businessman who blew into Blues. |
|
Before she became a professional jewelry designer, Pam was an executive with the New Yorker Magazine, a far cry from her artistic leanings. |
|
The platinum blond belter from Sennybridge says solo record number three will be a far cry from the classical crossover style that made his name. |
|
It's a far cry from last month, when the third warmest March on record left people fighting over deckchairs like these on Brighton beach. |
|
This is a far cry from the allegations of brainwashing and cultism which Mr Curtis, and now the media, sought to portray. |
|
The Pelagius and Pelagians revealed in these texts are a far cry from the caricatures of heresiologists. |
|
It was all a far cry from conditions for today's training sessions, held at Penrith Leisure Centre. |
|
The relationist is likely to reply that this is a far cry from demonstrating that the dynamic shift is nomically possible in a strict sense. |
|
It's a far cry from her days as a snaggletoothed wannabe with bad fake tan and cornrows. |
|
The new villages are built of mortar and brick, some of stone, and are a far cry from the villages of mudhouses. |
|
Life in the big city was a far cry from his upbringing on a quiet, small farm. |
|
It's a far cry from the days of Rosie Casals, Billie Jean King, and Betty Stove. |
|
|
An accountant who steps into a critical situation on a short-term basis is a far cry from an ordinary temp. |
|
To be sure, Argentina's tampon squeeze is a far cry from shortages plaguing Venezuela and Cuba. |
|
It was calm and statesmanlike, a far cry from the ranting scaremonger we saw too often during the campaign. |
|
Mature guilt is a far cry from the early manifestations of guilt and guiltlike behavior in childhood. |
|
A far cry from 1988, when the McLaren-Hondas of Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost took 15 of 16 grands prix. |
|
This Brill machine is a far cry from the ponderous push-type reel mowers that I recall from my youth. |
|
The concept is a far cry from new-age hippy shops with their Patchouli joss sticks, crystal beads and dolphin music. |
|
Jacqueline Jossa A far cry from her character Lauren's look in Enders, Jax radiates glamour in this floor-length gown. |
|
This is a far cry from the way in which the ANC was once viewed internationally and by the majority of South Africans. |
|
The themes of growing up and betrayal are a far cry from the ditzy social escapades of Bridget Jones. |
|
Of course, the Prakritic works, Buddhist or otherwise, that Jamison mentions are a far cry from either royal prasasti, or from developed kavya, for that matter. |
|
This is the west-coast take on structured freedom, and it's a wonderfully far cry from the film soundstages where too many LA jazzmen grow rich and stiff. |
|
Today''s estate cars are much more luxury vehicles, a far cry from those early days when they were usually referred to as station wagons or shooting brakes. |
|
The party atmosphere was a far cry from the gruelling 30-mile speed marches and demanding assault courses Pip, 27, overcame to succeed in the male-dominated Marines. |
|
Farmer had 12 kills, a far cry from Evan Thatcher's 20 or Adam Naeve's 19, but it was apparent he was up for this match, especially with the heckling factor. |
|
The best Seat ever and a far cry from the lash-ups of the 80s, this new Leon is proof that having VW as a parent company is paying the Spanish auto-maker handsome dividends. |
|