ADVERB
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in the same way as; like
in common with families in general, one parent families have been getting smaller
How To Use in common with In A Sentence
- Where destruction pure and simple is desired, the shell is charged with a high explosive such as picric acid or T.N.T., the colloquial abbreviation for the devastating agent scientifically known as "Trinitrotoluene," the base of which, in common with all the high explosives used by the different powers and variously known as lyddite, melinite, cheddite, and so forth, is picric acid. Aeroplanes and Dirigibles of War
- Beyond their settings, what these future-war games have in common with the Modern Warfare series is a refusal to forthrightly acknowledge the inspiration for their subject matter.
- We have one great thing in common with Mars - both planets orbit the same star.
- In common with all politicians, he has a dread of winter elections.
- In common with most social networking sites, Facebook has always seemed like a kind of yapping gallery of the lost, the deluded and the damned; if I fancy any of that, I can go to the pub with friends. It's our class, not our colour, that screws us up
- He shouted something about the Disk Jockey being a "bunkie" (whatever that was) and made a disparaging remark about the Disk Jockey's costume (like he was in a position to criticize), before hurling a punch that had a lot in common with some express trains. The Sinister Six Combo
- Robin and Dad have always talked farming, though you wouldn't think mushrooms and sod have much in common with birdseed, which is Dad's major industry. ' Second Wind
- Swindon were competent but, in common with many of the underdog teams playing over the weekend, simply lacked the guile or spark to score. Times, Sunday Times
- It seems that graphologists, in common with astrologers and other similar ‘experts,’ can disagree.
- -- In common with the perforans, this muscle arises from the inner condyloid ridge of the humerus. Diseases of the Horse's Foot