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Answer for the clue "Of the same sort ", 4 letters:
akin

Alternative clues for the word akin

Usage examples of akin.

Chronicle of 1146-54, with a wider patriotic outlook that is more akin to that of Monomakh and of the patriotic clerics, and which regards self-sacrifice for Russia as the noblest of virtues.

His style, at once realistic and sublime, is distinctly akin to that of the great Anglican mystics Herbert and Vaughan.

Russian more closely akin to that of his letters than that of his literary prose.

His thought is mainly historical, and the way he understood history as a spontaneous, unpredestined, incalculable force continuing the equally spontaneous and unpredestined evolution of nature makes him, like Grigoriev, akin to Bergson.

His romanticism is very Russian, genuinely akin to the spirit of Russian folk song and folk tales.

It is easy to see that the method, while it gives unusual freshness to imaginative representation, is in essence hostile to all culture and all social form, and is psychologically akin to anarchism.

It has often been affirmed that Tolstoy was an eminently natural, subconscious, elemental man, and that in this he was akin to primitive man, as yet imperfectly differentiated from nature.

But his method of constructing a story is akin to the method used in music.

What is particularly original in Rozanov, and what makes him so much akin to Dos-toyevsky, is his peculiar attitude to morality.

Shestov has no roots in any soil: his thought is international, or rather supranational, and in this respect more akin to Tolstoy than to Dostoyevsky.

His metaphysics is closely akin to that of the symbolists: it is a mysticism of impersonal forces that he has associated with the dynamic philosophy of Heraclitus the Dark.

But even apart from this perversity, his philosophy itself inclines towards a nihilism akin to Satanism.

Annensky is akin to Chekhov, for his material is also the pinpricks and infinitesimals of life.

Though in his technique he is almost free from symbolist influences, the general spirit of his poetry is much more akin to symbolism than to that of the younger school, for, alone of the younger poets, he is a mystic.

He is genuinely akin to the spirit of the Russian folk song, though he does not adopt its meters.