Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [pron] [prep] the same " in BNC.
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1 | At Aintree he beat The Thinker just over seven lengths and is due to meet him on the same terms , although Jimmy Frost , his rider , may put up a pound or two more than the minimum 10st . |
2 | Although relatively fresh and interesting , neither has anything like the same energy as his screenplay for Mackendrick . |
3 | This involves them in the same difficulties as those faced , or evaded , by psychologists . |
4 | The footwells need cutting and rewelding for a V8 , so it would be easier to repair yours at the same time as , if you buy a new bulkhead , it will need chopping and welding just the same . |
5 | This puts them on the same footing as European growers after earlier anger and allegations that Ministry of Agriculture officials had agreed terms that disadvantaged UK grain growers . |
6 | The following involves everybody at the same time . |
7 | He should understand that ‘ the story of Christ is simply a true myth : a myth working on us in the same way as the others , but with this tremendous difference that it really happened : and one must be content to accept it in the same way . ’ |
8 | Are you supposed to press them at the same time ? |
9 | I would be glad to exchange them for the same face value as the increasingly worthless and derisory folding stuff . |
10 | Right they all make the salt , they all make it in the same way Hydrochloric acid would make ? |
11 | All languages have systems but they do not all use them for the same purposes ; what is an essential distinction in one language may be quite disregarded in another . |
12 | In other words while the public may have all watched the same news they did n't all see it in the same way . |
13 | The expression I is not of course the only such troublesome feature of English ; the following examples all present us with the same sort of problems ( with the relevant deictic expression italicized , a convention followed throughout this Chapter ) : ( 6 ) You are the mother of Napoleon ( 7 ) This is an eighteenth-century man-trap ( 8 ) Mary is in love with that fellow over there ( 9 ) It is now 12.15 The sentences are true , respectively , just in case the addressee is indeed the mother of Napoleon , the object currently being indicated by the speaker is indeed an eighteenth-century man-trap , Mary is indeed in love with the fellow in the location indicated by the speaker , and at the time of speaking it is indeed 12.15 . |
14 | i found myself in the same place where I 'd been wounded in Easter , 1917 . |
15 | Unable to find one with the same outward-opening flap , he did the next best thing and took an average price for similar letter-boxes and forwarded you a cheque for this amount . |
16 | However , it seemed a shame to be able to design the forms using the computer and not be able to complete them on the same machine at a later point . |
17 | However , it seemed a shame to be able to design the forms using the computer and not be able to complete them on the same machine at a later point . |
18 | The conclusion that there was not going to be any hit him at the same time as Rincewind , whirring wildly down the passage , kicked him sharply in the groin . |
19 | I wanted us both to read it at the same time . ’ |
20 | Most pay them on the same rates of pay , but because they lack seniority and are usually filling low-skilled , entry-level positions , seasonal workers ' actual earnings are usually lower than those of comparable regular workers . |
21 | both , really I think they both hit you at the same time |