Example sentences of "[adj] in [noun prp] as [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Men like Spurgeon , John Stoughton , R. F. Horton , J. H. Rigg or F. B. Meyer could be as famous in America as in England .
2 A particular theoretical diagnosis of American urban crisis achieves a certain respectability and is assumed to generate policy templates that are universally useful in all post-industrial societies , as applicable in Newcastle as in New York .
3 As shown in column ( 3 ) , output per worker is twice as great in Slovenia as in Kosovo , and , in general , there is a difference between the levels of productivity in the North and the South .
4 The defeat was severe , for the internationalist Left had been as strong in Finland as in Great Russia .
5 In addition , traditional anti-popery was as alive in America as in England and politically as important , especially after the arrival of Catholic immigrants in the 1840s .
6 The range will be available in Europe as of March 22 , but again two weeks earlier in the UK .
7 Cumbric produced a prefix as familiar in Strathclyde as in Wales : caer , meaning a fort or , more generally , a dwelling place .
8 Since also the percentage of assessments below £3 was much the same in Sussex as in Norfolk and Berkshire , a good many farm workers there might have been cottagers who had their own plots of land .
9 Regardless of local circumstances , they would be the same in Glasgow as in Naples ; the same in Lisbon as in Berlin .
10 Regardless of local circumstances , they would be the same in Glasgow as in Naples ; the same in Lisbon as in Berlin .
11 THE MILITANT defenders of animals ' rights have been as active in Canada as in Britain .
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