Example sentences of "[noun] and [vb -s] [prep] the same " in BNC.

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1 The other player then picks up four beads from one hole on her side and plays in the same way .
2 What matters is access to Japan 's markets ; America would be content if Japan increased its imports and exports by the same amount ( leaving the trade balance , and the associated accounting identities , undisturbed ) .
3 As it happens , the automated machinery used to build the Metro body is very similar to that used at SAAB and comes from the same manufacturer .
4 This aspect of option premiums may be seen more clearly if we look at calls and puts with the same exercise price but with different expiry dates .
5 These are portfolios of written calls and puts or bought calls and puts with the same exercise price and expiry date on the same underlying security .
6 Matching receivables and payables in the same currency or in closely related currencies is a very effective and less costly method of hedging exposures .
7 Finally , Lindsey and other tax experts have consistently argued that as tax rates are cut , economic efficiency is raised by reducing tax breaks and shelters at the same time .
8 At the same time , UM imports had been steadily rising , including very substantial imports from UM Vehicle Divisions on the Continent which had greatly expanded their total output and exports over the same period .
9 The follow-up , Hup , came out last week and runs along the same lines : some neatly-chopped guitar riffs float in a fashionably psychedelic haze , while the nasal disdain of Miles Hunt 's voice rides a few tuneful melodies .
10 Every night Tip O'Neill drops by his bed and prays to the same God that you do and he prays for the strength that 's necessary the next day to defeat everything that you believe in .
11 It came as no surprise to mystics that DNA is found to function like a right handed helix in which each tread is of the same size and turns at the same rate of 36° per tread .
12 The Beast is a continuation of that tradition and capitalises on the same merits in combination with a wealth of other Brooks technology .
13 This neat orderliness has been attacked by Le Page and Tabouret-Keller , who write ( 1985 : 198 ) : Such a model necessarily implies a linear sequence of varieties within " a language " , with the implication that all innovation starts from the same source and travels in the same direction ; and that innovation in phonology is paralleled by a similar sequence of innovation in different parts of the grammar and lexicon .
14 He enters upstage , makes a small arc and leaves by the same side , a few feet downstage .
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