Example sentences of "it [verb] [art] same [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Although not technically a fountain , it utilizes the same components as the conventional fountain .
2 Unfortunately , it does not succeed on limey soils but otherwise it needs the same conditions as the brunneras .
3 It has the same services , of sending letters and graphics , but also has the capacity for a visual link-up .
4 ‘ IBM will say it has the same API everywhere , and that users can retain code ’ , he says , ‘ But it 's not promising that it will work unchanged ’ .
5 In dealing with the question of possession it adopted the same time-limits as did the Sentences of Paul , as well as the thirty-year rule of late Roman Law .
6 The same is true of Univel — already so tightly bound to Novell it uses the same premises and the self-same order-entry system .
7 As Frances Power Cobbe , a leading Victorian feminist , perceived , the medical profession occupied ‘ with strangely close analogy the position of the priesthood of former times , it assumes the same airs of authority … and enters every family with a latch key of private information ’ .
8 It charges the same prices , ’ he pointed out .
9 This apoptosis is dependent on c-Myc expression ; its extent is proportional to the level of intracellular c-Myc protein , and it requires the same regions of the c-Myc protein as are required for co-transformation and autosuppression .
10 Probably it served the same functions in the hands of the Minoan priestesses .
11 Can I use Carbonflo in this engine and would it have the same benefits such as lower fuel consumption ?
12 This is not the most familiar approach to quantum theory , but it gives the same results as other methods .
13 We ca n't say that it occupies the same addresses in all species , because we ca n't meaningfully compare address labels across species .
14 It is similar in type to the Simmental , though more elegantly built and the coat colour bright red rather than yellowish tan , and it shares the same origins in the old Bernese brought in by Mennonites during the eighteenth century ( see Alpine section ) .
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