Example sentences of "live [prep] [art] same [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | If a Muslim , she usually marries a cousin who lives in the same village so at least the surroundings are familiar to her ; but among Hindus and Sikhs the husband 's family nearly always live in a different village ( because a woman must marry outside her kin ) . |
2 | Finn lives in a small place in America , and having been poor , still lives in the same way . |
3 | Later to be run on the death of his father by Ted Parris , who still lives in the same road , taking over at the age of 15 until called into the services during the first war . |
4 | Anthony Purcell lives in the same road as the Strongs in Forest Hill near Oxford . |
5 | He lives in the same town and it still hurts her to see him . |
6 | His brother , who lives in the same house , spoke with Mr Mandela for five hours on 4 August . |
7 | His younger brother , who lives in the same house in Umtata , met Mr Mandela in August and subsequently travelled to ANC headquarters in Lusaka . |
8 | ‘ It could n't possibly have been Eddie who impersonated Delia and anyway there 'd have been no point when she lives in the same house as Angy . ’ |
9 | It 's this friend of my brother 's who lives in the same block . |
10 | ‘ I did n't know Alex well but you ca n't not know a lad who lives in the same street . ’ |
11 | It would have been unthinkable in the Spain of those days to have male and female students living under the same roof . |
12 | Leila had not been at all pleased to find she was living under the same roof as Zambia Crevecoeur . |
13 | This can meet her need temporarily when she is at some crisis point , providing , for all concerned , a trial period of living under the same roof , in this tactful guise of a holiday — without commitment on either side . |
14 | Living under the same roof permanently will need working at , and sacrifices will have to be made on both sides if it is to succeed . |
15 | The CICB said the woman were abused so long ago that their cases had to be considered under the pre-1979 rules which excluded compensation for offences committed by relatives living under the same roof . |
16 | I got the impression that Jean-Claude had been so certain that his relationship with his sister was the most singular she would ever make , that the mere fact of their not living under the same roof would do nothing to erode what they had together . |
17 | It discussed whether a requirement should be imposed that the couple should not be living under the same roof at the time of the rape . |
18 | ‘ All I 'm trying to do is to find a solution to the problems we 're bound to run into if we 're living under the same roof , ’ she said stiffly . |
19 | She only knew she was bitterly disappointed that she and Seb would not be living under the same roof . |
20 | ‘ Living in the same apartment as always , ’ Gina said . |
21 | ‘ We were just the same age and living in the same hole , ’ she said vaguely . |
22 | One reason may well be that people living in the same locality share , whatever their class position , similar material positions . |
23 | I was n't going to turn her out with nowhere to go , you know , young lady — but perhaps it 's a bit hard on an old lady to go into a new place after living in the same cottage most of her life . |
24 | The author explores , in this paper , some philosophical arguments for equal distribution of scarce goods between people of different age groups living in the same society . |
25 | I have been living in the same bungalow now for 10 years , and it seems no easier now than it was 10 years ago to find staff . |
26 | 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 ) . |
27 | What such arrangements traditionally have provided is a large group of women , related to each other as in-laws and living in the same household , who operate their own quite complex social organization in which each gains significant support . |
28 | 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 . |
29 | Recently , home responsibility was extended to include the care of elderly relatives not living in the same household . |
30 | 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 . |