0 If you say two things in the same breath, you say two things that are so different that if one is true, the other must be false:
In the same breath, though, he went on to describe the tunes as poison.
The doctor thus separates the professional world from the world of literature and in the same breath mentions "philosophy" as a mediator for these two.
He denies that this sort of description is incomplete, but in the same breath says that the \/-function is a statistical description, the description of an ensemble of systems.
It is a word that trips too lightly off many tongues—often the tongues of those demanding rights without considering, in the same breath, the responsibilities.
These are elements of such a totally different order that it is disingenuous in the extreme to mention them in the same breath.
It is no: usual to debate the multi-fibre arrangement and the footwear industry in the same breath.
It is manifestly unfair to deal with these in the same breath for tax purposes.
Is she in the same breath saying that it does not matter?