Example sentences of "[verb] [art] same [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | Two days later I met the same lady and her sari had been stolen in the middle of the night . |
2 | The confidentiality claim met the same fate as the other arguments . |
3 | It met the same fate as its predecessors . |
4 | The new instrument seeks to skin the same cat but in a slightly different way . |
5 | As far back as 1904 Winston Churchill had foreseen the same change when he predicted the tariff reformers ' coming takeover of the party . |
6 | It is not difficult to see why corporate crime has not received the same publicity as murder , robbery , theft , rape and so on — both in the mass media and in the study of crime . |
7 | ‘ Did anyone know that Mowbray had received the same warning as Sir Ralph ? ’ |
8 | The methods and their paraphernalia are all ‘ stageprops ’ , aids to contacting the same force and channelling the mind in that direction . |
9 | All in all , being an under sixteen-year-old mother has little official recognised status at all , even though this involves the same care and costs as for an older mother . |
10 | Cooper was trained as an art historian and he applied the same methodology and rigorous scholarship to his chosen artists as earlier generations had to the Old Masters . |
11 | Most people in bands have quite similar backgrounds and I reckon a lot of them shared the same experience as I did . |
12 | " Philip so honoured him " , wrote Roger of Howden , " that every day they ate at the same table , shared the same dish and a- night the bed did not separate them . |
13 | The rich , the good , the pretty , the blessed all shared the same fate as the poor , the bad , the ugly , the deprived . |
14 | They shared the same cigarette and frolicked in the pool . |
15 | They shared the same paynote and were self-selected . |
16 | Trams and buses henceforward shared the same Body and Paint shops , while a new Fitting shop was created in an adjacent building fronting on to the Coliseum . |
17 | ‘ This little oasis is a great pleasure to everyone in the area and it would be a travesty if it were ever to go the same way as everywhere else in the Newbury district — for commercial gain . ’ |
18 | We do n't want the same to happen to us in the UK — to go the same way as the British motor or electronics industries have — and to prevent this we must make ourselves as lean , fit and efficient as possible ; able to compete with the Japanese on quality , service , delivery and price . |
19 | Football clubs and debt go hand in hand but few seem to go the same way as the hundreds of small businesses biting the dust every day . |
20 | Well you 're meant to go the same way as the clock goes and that means it 's you next . |
21 | I 've cut the ropes that bind me to the shore , she thought , and sinking down onto the arm of Meredith 's chair she listened , smiling , to one of the pirates confiding that when he was in town he consulted the same dentist as dear Johnny . |
22 | If no changes occur then repeat the same remedy and wait again . |
23 | Again , the TUC General Council made the same accusation when it met the Beveridge Committee seventeen years later : F.H . |
24 | Fat Man and Little Boy ) , made the same year and released at the cinema . |
25 | I made the same mistake that I make , year after year . |
26 | My story is similar to Annie 's in that I made the same mistake and thought of my granddaughter as a substitute child . |
27 | Malcolm Smith , who runs the noted Jencra herd at Stoke on Trent , paid 7,500gn for Jim Goldie 's 17-month-old Epatant son , Goldie 's Globetrotter , while the suitably named Goldie 's Goldmine , another by the same sire , made the same amount when it sold in a private deal to David Dick of Mains of Throsk , Stirling , and Archie McGregor , Allanfauld , Kilsyth , after being turned out of the ring unsold at 7,200gn . |
28 | One who did made the same point as many arts students : |
29 | Nye ( 1984 ) made the same point when he observed that the agenda for examining the power of US firms in the 1980s was little different from that of the early 1970s , despite the relative loss of US power . |
30 | The resistance of Ulster was also linked to its business roots with such slogans as " Industrial Ulster is united " or " They mean business " , and Law made the same point when he described in Norwich a recent meeting that he had addressed in the Ulster Hall : |