49 Metaphors for sames

The same was a strange kind of offence (said Luther) that the world was offended at him who raised the dead, who made the blind to see, and the deaf to hear, &c. Our Lord alluded to the verse that immediately follows and completes his quotations from Isaiah.

His mother thought she'd go and see What sort of bird this same might be.

In the practical world, the world whose significances we follow, sames of the same are certainly not sames of one another; and things constantly cause other things without being held responsible for everything of which those other things are causes.

And the same necessity of conforming his ideas of SUBSTANCES to things without him, as to archetypes made by nature, that Adam was under, if he would not wilfully impose upon himself, the same are all men ever since under too.

All the same, albeit he could form no very clear idea of what was in his son's head, for the latter having become a "gentleman" was beyond his purview, he felt some disquietude to see a holiday, legitimate enough no doubt after a successful examination, dragging out to such a length.

Now, Miss Minerva, as her name connoted, was a wise woman; and she had reached an unerring conclusion by two different and devious routes, to wit, intuition and logic, the same being the high road and low road of reasonhigh or low in either case as you may prefer.

"The same," was the laconic reply of his visitor.

"Participles which are derived from active verbs, will govern the objective case, the same as the verbs from which they are derived"Emmons's Gram., p. 61.

In the greenhouse, the same as Act I. ANTHONY is bedding small plants where the Edge Vine grew.

The same is the case with trades, and is specially exemplified in the instance of trades-unions, or, their mediaeval prototypes, the guilds.

Japan is affected already, and the same will be the case with China as soon as Europe forces open the door there.

Just the same as a cowardice is a female coward.

This same is women's most impatience: Yet, mother, I have often heard ye say, That you have found my father temperate, And ever free from such affections.

That same is the coward's common proverb.

Doth he not say to every guest that comes, This same is Warman, that was once my steward? WAR.

THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID.

Doth he not say to every guest that comes, This same is Warman, that was once my steward? WAR.

He that goeth up against Lithopolis and them that dwell therein, the same is a dreaming Nimshi.

The same was the fact with le Feu-Follet, though Raoul had run up the tri-color as he opened on the felucca, and he kept it flying as long as there was any appearance of hostilities.

The same also is the spirit for service, whether it shines through the life of Jane Addams or of Mrs. Appasamy.

* * St. Paul calleth that the work of the law, which is done and acted through the knowledge of the law by a constrained will without the holy Spirit; so that the same is a work of the law, which the law earnestly requireth and strictly will have done; it is not a voluntary work, but a forced work of the rod.

My dear friend, you seem not well yet to have learned the meaning of these words, which I desire to have ever written upon my heart, 'Whoever doeth the will of My Father which is in heaven, the same is My brother, and sister, and mother.'

The same is the state of intellectual and manual performances.

It would, all the same, I thought, have been better taste on his part to have contented himself with leaving kind inquiries at the door.

The spiritual power, which is that of imbibing, at the expense of the aforesaid candidate, any number of fluid pounds of anything good to take, whether the same may be punches, cock-tails, smashes, slings, or plain drinks.

49 Metaphors for  sames