It belongsas clear as day to the man you see in the photograph.
2
This land belongsas much to me as to you.
3
When a text is in the public domain, it belongsas much to you as to anyone.
4
It belongsas well to the palace as the hovel, for it is none other than the rattle.
5
He has no right to take up all the highway, which belongsas much to me as to him.
6
By way of this document her daughter Rosette, a quadroon of eleven, belongsas a slave to the aforementioned Zarite.
7
We are affirming or denying the right of petition which by all law belongsas much to women as to men.
8
I want you literally to realise that, darling-andto feel that the money belongsas much to you as to me!
9
On those grounds he belongsas much in Paris as in Amsterdam and this deal acknowledges the European tradition as a common heritage.
10
The soil of the country belongsas of right to the entire people of the country, not to any one class, but to the nation.
11
Much the greatest of this trio of authoresses is the last, Jane Austen, who perhaps belongsas much to the nineteenth century as the eighteenth.
12
We may therefore define the "perspective" to which the sensation in question belongsas the set of particulars that are simultaneous with this sensation.