Example sentences of "[verb] in [art] same [noun sg] be " in BNC.

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1 This would explain why children of the same genetics , age and sex , living in the same house are more likely to both contract the illness than any of the other combinations studied .
2 Clutton-Brock ( 1974 ) , for example , using finer instruments and methods than the earlier work , and applying it to species contrasts , was able to show that differences between two colobus species living in the same forest were functions of their feeding ecology .
3 But equally , the buried incestuous temptation invoked by the seductive mother may result in the same man being profoundly moved and sexually attracted to distressed women for whom he has no emotional responsibility .
4 She sent the first correct solution selected and knew that the teams this century who appeared in FA Cup finals and were relegated in the same season were Brighton ( 1983 ) , Leicester ( 1969 ) , Manchester City ( 1926 ) and Chelsea ( 1915 )
5 In itself , the occurrence of both infinitive forms in the same context is in flagrant contradiction with the idea of meaningless contextual variation .
6 The fact that vocational architecture students are taught in the same department is a particularly positive aspect because it results in expertise in all fields of building design being readily available to the historian .
7 One popular religious writer who thinks that they believe in the same god is John Hick .
8 Analysis of the population dynamics and associated genetics of Trifolium repens in the same pasture is even more revealing .
9 " The force between two currents flowing in the same direction is attractive . " )
10 Only twelve seconds of Crawford 's newly found skill was seen in this racy film and , incidentally , one of the two female water-skiers glimpsed in the same scene was Charlotte Rampling in her first film role .
11 A stallion that behaves in the same way is psychologically more threatening to us , but it is best to respond with tact — to stroke the horse briefly and then to leave it in peace .
12 Another Anglo-Irishman working in the same tradition was Joseph Le Fanu ( 1814–73 ) , whose father , the Dean of Emly , lived and died in fear of premature burial .
13 This means that in the OED only cross-references backwards or to entries published in the same fascicle are adequate , and in the Supplement , only cross-references to OED , to earlier volumes , and to the same volume ( usually ) are adequate .
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