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Some Related Sentences

Similarly and someone
Similarly, if someone should die, those close to them should hold to their serenity because the loved one was made of flesh and blood destined to death.
" Similarly, in Maltese a Christian male is called Nisrani, whilst someone from Nazareth is called Nazzarenu.
Similarly, judges might assume in default of express evidence to the contrary that the place where the cause of action arose would provide certain basic protections, e. g. that the foreign court would provide a remedy to someone who was injured due to the negligence of another.
Similarly, when telling a story about someone, the deictic center is likely to switch to them.
Similarly, while someone would not be permitted to eat chametz on Passover unless his life were in danger, the prohibition of kitniyot is not so strict.
Similarly, someone can benefit for " free " from an externality or from a public good, but someone has to pay the cost of producing these benefits.
Similarly, a Salishan language equivalent of the English sentence “ It was John who called ” would not require the assumption that the listener knows that someone called.
Similarly, in Nepal, sneezers are believed to be remembered by someone at that particular moment.
Similarly, the largest estate an owner in fee tail could convey to someone else was a life estate, since the grantee's interest again terminated automatically when the grantor ( the original owner ) died.
" Similarly, the amateur historian Bob Atchison said that Anastasia was akin to someone making a film in which " Anne Frank moves to Orlando and opens a crocodile farm with a guy named Mort.
Similarly, in areas of the law such as bankruptcy, an attorney representing someone filing a bankruptcy petition must engage in due diligence to determine that the representations made in the bankruptcy petition are factually accurate.
Similarly, there is a program whereby public utility and government work trucks can display a decal identifying the occupant as someone who can be approached if a child feels that they are in danger, or lost, or otherwise distraught.
Similarly, in the dilemma involving infidelity over the internet, more men indicated their partner ’ s sexual involvement would upset them more than a partner ’ s emotional bonding with someone else.
Similarly, a complaint for breach of a promise to marry could be met by a demurrer because the law in most jurisdictions expressly prohibits such claims on public policy grounds ( while there may be claims for damages on a breach of promise to marry, e. g., U. S. courts are not going to force someone to marry another ).
Similarly, the word quack is reserved for someone who promotes a medical remedy or practice that is widely considered to be ineffective ; this term however does not imply any deep belief in the idea or product they are attempting to sell.
Similarly, Roy Brown was convicted of murder due in part to bite-mark evidence, and freed after DNA testing of the saliva left in the bite wounds matched someone else.
Similarly a jure dignitatis degree is one awarded to someone who has demonstrated their eminence and scholarship by being appointed to a particular office.
Similarly, there would be no change if someone proved that God does not exist.
Similarly, someone with Type 1, who is therefore profoundly deaf from birth, may keep good central vision until the sixth decade of life, or even beyond.
Similarly, assuming the business has purveyed its goods honestly and with full disclosure, consumers have no inherent rights to govern the business, which belongs to someone else.
Similarly, The Kinks ' songs, " Shangri-La " and " Clichés of the World ( B Movie )", also appear to describe someone going through a midlife crisis.
Similarly, a sales manager might wonder which of two sites would be a more appropriate choice for a new store, so he would ask someone to study the market and write a report with the recommendations.
Similarly, if someone opens any window or increases the opening in any window, or indeed dislodges the window by the application of any energy, he is using force to enter ..."

Similarly and who
Similarly, a girl who graduates with a good working knowledge of stenography and the use of clerical machines and who is able to get a job at once may wish to improve her skill and knowledge by a year or two of further study in a community college or secretarial school.
Similarly, anyone who wishes to understand the mind of the sacred writers must first cleanse his own life, and approach the saints by copying their deeds.
Similarly, in 1971, Alistair Campbell stated that the apologue technique used in Beowulf is so infrequent in the epic tradition aside from when Virgil uses it that the poet who composed Beowulf could not have written the poem in such a manner without first coming across Virgil's writings.
Similarly, those participants who are recipients of the activities are typically known as bottoms, those who are controlled by their partners as submissives, and those who receive pain as masochists ; again, these are frequently the same person and the terms are sometimes used interchangeably.
Similarly, the influences of philosophers such as Sir Francis Bacon ( 1561 – 1626 ) and René Descartes ( 1596 – 1650 ), who demanded more rigor in mathematics and in removing bias from scientific observations, led to a scientific revolution.
Similarly, rebels who took power in the city but with the citadel still held by the former rulers could by no means regard their tenure of power as secure.
" Similarly, in Crash ( 1996 ), people who have been injured in car crashes attempt to view their ordeal as " a fertilizing rather than a destructive event ".
Similarly, CD4 counts dropped in the patients who were HIV-infected, but remained stable in the HIV-negative patients, in spite of similar rates of risk behavior.
Similarly, it is often used today as a metaphor for a brainless lunk or entity who serves man under controlled conditions but is hostile to him under others.
Similarly, the repression the authoritarian single-party regime he led imposed on the population and severe food shortages also left marks and, despite having always denied, Luís Cabral was accused of being responsible for the death of a large number of black Guinea-Bissauan soldiers who had fought along with the Portuguese Army against the PAIGC guerrillas during the Portuguese Colonial War.
Similarly, letters of credence may contain the name of the head of state, not the governor-general, even if it is the latter who signs and receives them ; in 2005, Canada, Australia and New Zealand changed their policies and now all letters of credence solely address the governor-general of the relevant nation, not to the sovereign.
Similarly, the " breeder ", is the person who owned or leased the mare at the time of foaling.
Similarly, the Normans in Ivanhoe, who represent a more sophisticated culture, and the Saxons, who are poor, disenfranchised, and resentful of Norman rule, band together and begin to mold themselves into one people.
Similarly, one should trust one's city to an expert in the subject of the good, not to a mere politician who tries to gain power by giving people what they want, rather than what's good for them.
Similarly, the Greek ( hippeus ) is commonly translated " knight "; at least in its sense of the highest of the four Athenian social classes, those who could afford to maintain a warhorse in the state service.
" Similarly, English poet Anna Seward had a devoted friendship to Honora Sneyd, who was the subject of many of Seward's sonnets and poems.
Similarly, demons are evil magical beings who take affairs in the matters of the universe.
Similarly, in the Republic of China on Taiwan, the status of national without household registration refers to a person who has Republic of China nationality, but does not have an automatic entitlement to enter or reside in the Taiwan Area, and does not qualify for civic rights and duties there.
Similarly, the ace of the 1986 team, Dwight Gooden, threw his no-hitter for the Yankees ( in 1996 ), and David Cone, who starred for the Mets from 1987 – 1992, threw a perfect game later in his career, also as a Yankee.
Similarly, in British law the phrase racial group means " any group of people who are defined by reference to their race, colour, nationality ( including citizenship ) or ethnic or national origin ".

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