Example sentences of "[conj] the [noun] [vb -s] [art] same " in BNC.

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1 Your eye makes a natural adjustment for this when looking at the scene direct so that the colour appears the same irrespective of the lighting .
2 The assumption that the universe looks the same in every direction is clearly not true in reality .
3 Now at first sight , all this evidence that the universe looks the same whichever direction we look in might seem to suggest there is something special about our place in the universe .
4 However , many discussions of nationalism assume that the topic remains the same regardless of time and place , so that explanations are equally applicable to all cases .
5 To the extent that the grammar formalizes the same principles as those of preferred pragmatic inference one can think of grammar , as Levinson has suggested , as ‘ frozen pragmatics ’ ( Levinson 1987 ) .
6 Is he aware that the situation remains the same , and will he tell us when something will be done about it ?
7 But even if the money remains the same , it seems unlikely that the services will .
8 A larger number of people are getting married , so a larger number of people will get divorced if the divorce-rate stays the same .
9 As it stands , this operation requires three addresses , but it can be made into a two-address operation by making the source and the destination strings the same ; thus the vith entry in the table replaces the ith character in the source string .
10 One may truly get the sense of the Reeve 's Tale being played by the same company with the same costumes on the same stage as the Miller 's Tale : Absolon 's red hose for the " " halyday " " ( 3319 – 40 ) re-appear early on ( 3952 – 5 ) , and the daughter has the same grey eyes as the delicate Absolon ( 3317 , 3974 ) .
11 If one task uses only one input neuron and the other uses the same neuron as part of a pattern of input , then the system responds to activity in that neuron as if it is a part of the larger pattern .
12 The first comedian says something in a high-flown style , and the other repeats the same information in a colloquial one :
13 The local authority has the same duty to allow contact between the child and his parents and certain other individuals who have cared for him and the court has the same power to make contact orders under s34 .
14 Customs apparently now regard this as a supply by the landlord under the lease , and the reimbursement has the same treatment as the lease , ie generally exempt but standard-rated if the option applies .
15 Ownership of the dollars in the US has changed from Bank A to Bank B with regard to the $500 000 , but the total remains the same .
16 The pace may be different , but the fun remains the same .
17 But the principle remains the same . ’
18 Albanian hotels are a travellers nightmare , but the country shares the same climate as Greece and Italy .
19 The song may have changed , but the smell remains the same .
20 His guitar here may stray towards free-form psychedelic freak out , but the pain remains the same .
21 But the essence remains the same : a Chief Leader has his team of leaders ; the young explorers are divided into 12-strong ‘ fires ’ — a notion of Murray Levick 's , who said he wanted only as many people as could decently sit round a campfire .
22 The icons change from level to level , but the effect remains the same .
23 This follows because in the competitive world of the coral reef , a fish of the same species represents a major threat to the food supply and refuge of the sitting tenant , simply because the interloper requires the same type of food and habitat .
24 This is presumably because the task requires the same cognitive processors as shadowing — both tasks are speech-based .
25 The forms of lighthouses and boats , while almost toy-like in their basic simplicity , are developed internally in terms of a large number of planes or facets , and since the sky receives the same treatment , the painting resolves itself into a mass of small , shifting planes , jointed together or hanging behind each other in shallow depth .
26 Let us now make the question more precise , and ask whether the experience has the same effect at any time , or whether there are particular ‘ sensitive periods ’ at which it will be more influential than at others .
27 For the reject results the same calculations are done on the unshaded area giving revised probabilities of 0·32 for the 10 per cent and 0·68 for the 2 per cent levels .
28 For the reject results the same calculations are done on the unshaded area giving revised probabilities of 0.32 for the 10 per cent and 0.68 for the 2 per cent levels .
29 The fundamental proposition of the 1982 Act is that the immunity of trade unions in tort is totally abolished , though the union enjoys the same defences as an individual where action is taken in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute .
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