Example sentences of "he [modal v] [verb] the same [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Bishop ordained that the Vicar of Hailing should receive as his portion £5 10s yearly and that he should have the same acreage of land as the vicars of old possessed and also " all oblations what so ever within the bounds and limits of the parish , all the tithes of hay , lambs , wool , mills , calves , chicken , pigs , geese , ducks , eggs , bees ' honey , wax , cheese , milk , milk-meats , flax , hemp , pears , apples , garden herbs , pigeon houses , and merchandise , fisheries , pastures , onions , garlic and saffron , also the tithes , sheaves cultivated either by plough or spade and also the tithes of wood for fuel , coppice wood , thorns , rushes , faggots and fardells , within the bounds of the Parish , all of which the vicars and his successors shall have "
2 During a match when a player goes down injured he must make the same decision but this time in the thick of the action with the crowd chanting and the referee looking at his watch .
3 His group he 'll do the same test as the other group and it 's mainly based on vocabulary .
4 Do you think , you see you 've got to get another bloke and bloody great , he 'll do the same thing .
5 He covets your practice , and in order to get it he 'll play the same trick on you that he played on me . ’
6 John Coffin , she felt sure , would not ; he might think the same things , but would not say them in that way .
7 He planned to pursue integrative schemes as a private citizen and it was thought doubtful whether he could achieve the same effect in that capacity .
8 However , he could achieve the same result by giving less attention to each patient .
9 From over George 's shoulder stared the portrait of a general whose handling of an attack in the South African war had caused so many casualties to his own brigade that he had immediately been promoted away to see if he could do the same thing with divisions and corps .
10 But Creggan could not escape , for he remembered Minch 's command to try ant help her , and anyway he could feel the same longings she felt .
11 That would give him a week 's grace at least , and then he 'd do the same thing again in some other place to stay untraceable .
12 He would draw the same figure over and over again , trying to get what he wanted .
13 Officials said he would have the same message for all — the time has come to revive direct Arab-Israeli negotiations .
14 He would use the same series of signs to a horse that ignored him .
15 Here he is , h h he has the very unpleasant duty of explaining and justifying the drafting of this measure a a and I do hope it would be , it would be really rather an unexpected realisation of an ambition , but nevertheless one hopes eternal if my Noble Friend were to get up and say that as a result these few remarks that I have been tempted to make that some kind of effort is going to be made to tidy up as th th the processes whereby er such stuff appears , is allowed to appear on the pages of the Statute Book er er I do recall that when the Charities Bill was going through several committees , my Noble Friend was n't who who was d d dealing with the Bill in , on behalf of the Government was exceedingly helpful and I hope that he will show the same degree of goodwill today er and , and , and er h if he 's very clear and devote is very considerable energies to persuading those professional obs obfuscators who are responsible for this kind of garbage to do better in the future .
16 he will have the same relationship as so many other companies have er in relationship to other services they need to operate their business .
17 He will have the same pay and arrangements as previous presenters , ’ Radio 5 spokeswoman Judy Leighton tells me .
18 So , if he abstracts from his knowledge of what the brain state actually is , he can form the same conception of experience as that had by the subject of the experience .
19 More recently , these hidebound attitudes have changed , in that educated , intelligent Christians accept that there is little need for God to perform a miracle ( unless , moving in mysterious ways , He particularly wants to ) when He can create the same effect using natural processes ; while scientists have begun more and more to recognize that there may be more truth in the mystical writings of the Christian and other religions than they have previously been prepared to admit .
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