Example sentences of "[v-ing] [prep] the same [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 He came on , walking in the same direction as Rachaela , the dilute snow sparkling in his hat like sequins .
2 Appearing on the same page as the article is the information that Town Crier is printed in Bishop Auckland .
3 Auks are ‘ site-faithful ’ , often returning to the same ledge and the same partner year after year .
4 Then I realized that we kept returning to the same place and stopping for a few minutes , before moving off again around a similar route .
5 As it was , I felt thrilled to be walking on the same ground that young Thomson had trodden long before .
6 This is occurring at the same time as the Commission is using the single market as an excuse to augment its power for political means .
7 Did you see that one advertising triple glazing at the same time as his double would you believe ?
8 You can not deduce from the fact that it was happening at the same time that it was a cause .
9 How often do you meet and how many people there , you 're showing interest but you 're also qualifying at the same time and it 's not padding , it 's actually useful information because you 're thinking well that 's worth pursuing the R N I , yes but there 's money there .
10 This shows the present-value profiles for two bonds A and B , trading at the same price and yield to maturity , and having the same duration .
11 Leila had not been at all pleased to find she was living under the same roof as Zambia Crevecoeur .
12 Although she could not afford to stay there , she certainly intended to give the impression that she was lodging under the same roof as the leaders of the Party .
13 Living in the same apartment as always , ’ Gina said .
14 It is also the custom of certain groups who have migrated to Britain to pool resources between kin , either between people living in the same household or sometimes across households ( Anwar , 1985 , pp. 52–5 ; Brah , 1986 ) .
15 A rather similar pattern can be seen in the very different circumstances of the inter-war economic depression , when the Household Means Test meant effectively that young working adults living in the same household as their unemployed parents were expected to support them financially .
16 In addition , it was shown that women living in the same household as the person for whom they were caring were more likely to be either working full-time or not at all ; part-time employment was taken when the sick or elderly person lived elsewhere .
17 Of the carers in the 1985 GHS who were living in the same household as the person receiving care , 51 per cent of women reported spending at least fifty hours a week giving help compared with only 39 per cent of men .
18 Among carers living in the same household as the person receiving care , this difference is even more apparent , with 62 per cent of women providing help with personal care and 53 per cent being responsible for giving medication , compared with 43 per cent and 37 per cent of men respectively .
19 The only type of help in which , according to the 1985 GHS , men clearly outnumber women is in taking the disabled person out — 60 per cent of men compared with 49 per cent of women carers living in the same household as the person being given care ( Green , 1988 , p. 27 ) .
20 Carers living in the same household as the person receiving care , female carers , those with sole responsibility for providing care and those who were not economically active were especially disadvantaged .
21 A widower can become something of a ‘ cause ’ to those living in the same street or block of flats , whereas a widow , although not shunned , may be to some extent avoided by all but the most caring individuals in the early days of her bereavement .
22 The inner-city indicators were based largely on territorial assumptions , for example that people might have close relatives living in the same street or the next street , and that people would work in the same places as some of their close neighbours ( L. Milroy 1987 : 141–2 ) .
23 She 'd known he was growing up peculiar — he did badly at school , and had no friends — but she 'd begun to see , from living in the same house as him again , how different he was from other kids .
24 David began to think that it might be possible to go on living in the same house as Julia and Anthony without either betraying himself or suffering unendurable frustration .
25 And because I do n't want you living in the same house as someone who might be a murderer .
26 In fact it 's , it 's really You have to be living in the same house as somebody who 's
27 In the area of closest scrutiny only 14 per cent of males ( 45/311 ) and 19 per cent of females ( 75/390 ) aged over ten at the time of the 1861 census were living in the same house as the one they had inhabited in 1851 ; but many of them had moved only a short distance .
28 In an interview with police , Smith , who at the time was going through divorce proceedings but living in the same house as her husband , told them : ‘ It was him or me . ’
29 Unfortunately , in modern society , our ‘ own ’ are rarely living in the same town or even in the same county as us , which makes the ideal situation very difficult to achieve .
30 Furthermore , we have not dealt clearly enough with the position of those students who may be living in the same property as their landlord .
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