Example sentences of "[adv prt] and [adv] [prep] the same " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 several streets all very like one another , and many more streets still more like one another , inhabited by people equally like one another , who all went in and out at the same hours , with the same sound upon the same pavements , to do the same work , and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and tomorrow , and every year the counterpart of the last and the next .
2 Dickens likened the piston of the steam engine to " the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness " , but even by 1815 it was only a minority of the working population who had as yet been cast in the mould of his 1845 Coketowners who , " all went in and out at the same hours , with the same sound upon the same pavements , to do the same work , and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow " .
3 The away end bogs , according to who was forced to abandon half-times plans for a piss , are Heysel revisited — one narrow tunnel going into and coming out of the place was crammed with hundreds of fans all going in and out at the same time , plus a few old bills looking on saying helpfully ‘ I should n't do that if I were you .
4 She said : ‘ It is a local anaesthetic and you are in and out in the same day . ’
5 With precise control both units can be set to operate on and off at the same setting with consequent better heat distribution .
6 The insects are out and about for the same reason as us , moving at night to beat the midday heat at the very centre of the Grand Canyon .
7 The use of And yet in the third paragraph , for instance , gives the impression that the writer is thinking aloud , or perhaps just moving back and forth along the same line of argument — as one would do in chatting to a friend — rather than firmly wrapping up one stage in the argument before moving on to the next as is the case in the German text .
8 I would go round and round on the same point , he would commiserate , pretend to understand , but never move an inch .
9 ‘ Then why do I get the distinct impression that we 're going round and round in the same circles ? ’
  Next page