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Same   /seɪm/   Listen
Same

adjective
1.
Same in identity.  "Never wore the same dress twice" , "This road is the same one we were on yesterday" , "On the same side of the street"
2.
Closely similar or comparable in kind or quality or quantity or degree.  "Two girls of the same age" , "Mother and son have the same blue eyes" , "Animals of the same species" , "The same rules as before" , "Two boxes having the same dimensions" , "The same day next year"
3.
Equal in amount or value.  Synonym: like.  "Equivalent amounts" , "The same amount" , "Gave one six blows and the other a like number" , "The same number"
4.
Unchanged in character or nature.  "His attitude is the same as ever"
noun
1.
A member of an indigenous nomadic people living in northern Scandinavia and herding reindeer.  Synonyms: Lapp, Lapplander, Saame, Saami, Sami.
2.
The language of nomadic Lapps in northern Scandinavia and the Kola Peninsula.  Synonyms: Lapp, Saame, Saami, Sami.



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"Same" Quotes from Famous Books



... aide-decamp, will deliver you this, and will inform you of the very miserable state of my health, which obliges me to write to Mr. Dunn, to entreat that he will permit my landing to be as private as possible. Of you I must make the same request. A salute may be proper, but I beg nothing more may be done: my object must be to get to the chateau as speedily and with as little fatigue ...
— The Life and Correspondence of Sir Isaac Brock • Ferdinand Brock Tupper

... lectures to working men which it was my duty to deliver. It was also in 1860 that this topic was discussed before a jury of experts at the meeting of the British Association at Oxford, and from that time a sort of running fight on the same subject was carried on, until it culminated at the Cambridge Meeting of the Association in 1862, by my friend Sir W. Flower's public demonstration of the existence in the apes of those cerebral characters which had been said to be peculiar ...
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... possession of such a noumenal libertine does not amount to much for people whose actual existence is made up of nothing but definitely regulated phenomena. When the good and evil angels fought for the dead body of Moses, its presence must have been of about the same value to either of the contending parties, as that of Kant's noumenon, in the battle of impulses which rages in the breast of man. Metaphysicians, as a rule, are sadly deficient in the sense of humour; or they would surely abstain from advancing propositions which, when stripped of the verbiage ...
— Hume - (English Men of Letters Series) • T.H. Huxley

... order to obtain the grace of justification, and that it is not in any way necessary that he be prepared and disposed by the movement of his own will; let him be anathema."(813) Other acts that dispose or prepare the soul for justification, according to the same Council, are: the fear of divine justice; hope in God's mercy; charity, which is the font of all righteousness; detestation ...
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... told you," I said. "Human nature is always the same. Nobody ever is or does more than circumstances force him to be and do. Those remarkable women of old were made by circumstances. There were, comparatively speaking, no servants to be had, and so children were trained to habits of ...
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