Example sentences of "have [art] same [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Languages differ in how many such deictic names of days there are : the Amerindian language Chinantec has four named days either side of today ; Japanese names three days back from today , and two ahead ; Hindi has the same word for yesterday and tomorrow ( i.e. it glosses as " the relevant day adjacent to the day including CT " ) ; and so on ( Fillmore , 1975 ) . |
2 | The Mazda text has the same feel of awkwardness and lack of orientation about it as Halliday 's constructed example . |
3 | The first could be called the modal use , because it has the same kind of force as the modal use , ‘ probably ’ , and the second the psychological use because it makes a statement about one 's own psychological state of belief . |
4 | His great Death of Act aeon ( fig. 119 ) has the same kind of fusion of old and new as the Ludovisi throne ( fig. 83 ) , and is no less effective . |
5 | This picture offers us a useful parallel with the Handel portrait dating from about 1728 and has the same kind of confidential candour . |
6 | It has the same kind of surprising beauty as the trio at the end of Rosenkavalier . |
7 | The researcher , unfortunately , has the same problems with testing this hypothesis , despite its greater precision , as he or she has with the grander ones . |
8 | Peter Wright has the same problems in Birmingham . |
9 | The board has the same switches on it as I have on the rack , so if Bryan presses the board they light up for me too , so I can see what he 's got on . |
10 | Assuming that each individual has the same utility of income function and ability to gain from the public good , then with different incomes they will have different but the same marginal utility from the ( equally shared ) public good . |
11 | The concept of equality of outcomes does not mean that each person obtains the same number of marks in the same number of examinations , but that a representative individual of any group has the same probability of success as a representative individual of any other group . |
12 | Andorra has the same share of the market — six per cent — as Switzerland , for diametrically opposite reasons . |
13 | It should be carefully controlled so that it has the same character at all times , and is in perfect accord with the composer 's aesthetic objectives . |
14 | Yule and Kendall say that ‘ the selection of an individual from a population is random when each member of the population has the same chance of being chosen . ’ |
15 | Let us begin by considering how we might obtain a random sample ; that is , one in which each member of the population has the same chance of being chosen . |
16 | If nothing is expressly said about the rights of one class in respect of either ( a ) dividends , ( b ) return of capital , or ( c ) attendance at meetings or voting , then , prima facie , that class has the same rights in that respect as the residuary ordinary shares . |
17 | For instance , one of the signs that extremely and fast are united in a grammatical construction is the fact that the sequence extremely fast can be replaced by a single element , say , old , which has the same relationship to cars as does extremely fast ; furthermore , this substitution causes no grammatical change in the rest of the sentence . |
18 | In the sense that apple has the same relationship to fruit as dog has to animal ( i.e.' — is an immediate taxonym of — ' — see chapter 6 for the meaning of taxonym ) , that relation is of the sort known as ‘ many-to-one ’ . |
19 | The hon. Gentleman will forgive me if I say that he has the same problem with me that I have with the Whips Office . |
20 | I know of no-one else who has the same depth of knowledge of the subject and who can write with such articulation . |
21 | Julier is in charge of Berlin 's palaces and gardens , while Giersberg has the same role in Potsdam-Sanssouci . |
22 | Approaching from another angle , there is at least one answer which has the same claim to finality as ‘ I enjoy it ’ ( finality in the sense that no further reason may be demanded , although other reasons may outweigh it ) . |
23 | But as Seabrook points out , rugby league already has the same sort of thing in every town . |
24 | For the rest of us , it seems commonplace and obvious that we should be able to think , imagine , perceive and remember in the ways that we do , and we tend to take it for granted that the rest of the world has the same sort of experience of everyday life that we do . |
25 | The purpose of such an approach would be to demonstrate that the second language has the same potential for use as the first language , encourage learners to draw on their own experience of language by applying familiar procedures to the interpretation of second language use , and so to teach the second language system not as an end in itself but as a resource for the achievement of meaning . |
26 | This takeover of feminism by humanist psychological theories limits its ability to see subjects as socially , historically , or even psychologically different , since , ultimately , every subject has the same potential for consciousness and change . |
27 | We begin by classifying the valence-shell atomic orbitals ( AOs ) of the constituent atoms , in the symmetry of the molecule , as the set of molecular orbitals ( MOs ) has the same distribution of symmetry species as the set of contributing atomic orbitals . |
28 | It is possible , therefore , to construct a sample so that it has the same distribution of characteristics as the population as a whole or , if necessary , selected portions of it . |
29 | Then , establish the key area in which the person doing that job must achieve results , and review them regularly to make sure your employee always has the same view of the job as you do . |
30 | Let us now make the question more precise , and ask whether the experience has the same effect at any time , or whether there are particular ‘ sensitive periods ’ at which it will be more influential than at others . |