Example sentences of "form [noun sg] [prep] the same " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | A tract entitled The Manner of Passing Bills in Parliament , published in 1685 , may have formed part of the same work . |
2 | A property which was neither helping — as a qualifier forming part of the same noun phrase — to identify that entity , nor ascribable to any entity within the sentence , and which was not simply adverbially qualifying the verb , would have no convincing reason for appearing in the sentence at all . |
3 | There is no reason why it should , for it forms part of the same document , and appears to have been executed at the same time , as the legacy of liberatio . |
4 | This suggests that if a planning phase of speech is disrupted , then the following phase which forms part of the same semantic cycle will no longer be fluent because the prior semantic planning necessary for fluent speech has not been completed . |
5 | A statement forms part of the res gestae of a case if it is made contemporaneously with or shortly after any act or occurrence in issue in the proceedings so as to form part of the same transaction . |
6 | There was , of course , a diversity of tenures — so much so that it can never be assumed that the customs of any two manors were identical , or even similar , unless perhaps they formed part of the same feudal honour , for example the barony of Lewes in Sussex , which had evolved a set of common customs . |
7 | However , recall of the preceding clause ( clause 2 ) varied depending on whether or not that clause formed part of the same sentence as the most recent clause . |
8 | However , when the preceding clause and the last-heard clause formed part of the same sentence ( as in version ( a ) ) , recall scores for the preceding clause were 81 per cent . |
9 | All these categories form part of the same logical structure and none of them is intrinsically more important , or more fundamental , than any of the others . |
10 | They are alike in that both form part of a single entity-identifier ; this is reflected in surface syntax by the fact that they form part of the same noun phrase as their head noun . |
11 | You can enjoy what you eat and protect yourself form illness at the same time . |