Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] to [art] same [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps he secretly thinks I belong to the same world .
2 It 's best if you keep to the same time each week for regular activities , though be prepared to be flexible about it .
3 ‘ Now you go to the same playgrounds and schools where people called me a fag for being an actor and everybody as a Screen Actors Guild card falling out of their pocket .
4 We owe to the same Caesar the information that the Druids used the Greek alphabet ( 6.14 ) .
5 Presumably the washed-up film hoofer and the prima ballerina are thinking about each other as a preliminary to working together , falling in love and starting a bright new phase of their respective careers together ; and no doubt their movements ‘ unconsciously ’ fall into a complementary rhythm as they dance to the same music .
6 And they make to the same place to their feed .
7 If they report to the same boss they have an organizational bond ; if they are in different departments they have an organizational barrier .
8 If they report to the same boss they have an organizational bond ; if they are in different departments they have an organizational barrier .
9 He said , and it 's really good , he said , cos I 'm , I 'm celebrating my fortieth birthday , he said , and I ring my boys , he said , and they listen to the same sort of music I do .
10 Most speakers would agree , I think , that Mary wore a red dress and Mary wore a blue dress were contraries ( assuming , of course , that they refer to the same occasion , and that Mary , as would be normal , wore only one dress at a time ) ; the colour terms refer to the predominant colour of the dress , and there can be only one predominant colour .
11 Yeah but they go to somewhere bloody they go to the same place every year and they have a real good time .
12 According to this view , interbreeding is at the same time the criterion of whether two forms belong to the same species ( e.g. the dark and pale forms of the arctic skua interbreed freely , so they belong to the same species ) , and also the reason why organisms in nature do fall into discrete categories , with few intermediates .
13 This is like forensic science , where the more ‘ matches ’ one finds between two fingerprints , the greater the certainty that they belong to the same person .
14 Apart from errors and omissions these are defined in the National Accounts in such a way that they come to the same value .
15 Many people find that they return to the same company over and over again , or take up a permanent job offer at a place they have been working for a while .
16 Tottenham 's dilemma was well chronicled last year , but one wonders how long it will be before they return to the same situation .
17 The tags in the corpus must also be translated so that they conform to the same tagset as this new lexicon .
18 It may be shown ( using the criterion that they lead to the same set of equations ) that by adding the so-called leakage inductances to the ideal transformer the two representations ( Fig. 4.11 ) become equivalent .
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