It is, of course, possible that a State retaliates in consequence of an illegal act committed against itself by the performance of an act of a similar kind.
Retorsion is the technical term for the retaliation of discourteous or unkind or unfair and inequitable acts by acts of the same or a similar kind.
We have not the smallest reason to think them older than the Hellenic settlements of a similar kind on the same coasts.
The exhibition in the Hyde Park Crystal Palace in 1851 suggested various other enterprises of a similar kind.
There were other grievances of a similar kind: the only one redressed was a tax on military quarters, which had been ceded to the English residents.
He did not deny that evils existed in the Irish corporations, but he wished to see some scheme adopted which would not only remove those evils, but prevent the recurrence of others of a similar kind.
From many stories of a similar kind that I have read, I select the following as a fair specimen: it is related by a very celebrated saint, Ibraheem El-Khowwa[s.
This story of the miraculous fish reminds me of one of a similar kind which is related as authentic.
We might easily multiply instances of a similar kind, but that we wish to avoid so much repetition.
Other experiments of a similar kind were no less conclusive, for Merk[95] perforated all ivory plaque with a pointed flint which he used as a gimlet.
So far we know of no other discovery of a similar kind.
Yet another fine example of a similar kind is that of Maeshow in the Orkney Islands.
These are not so prominent in cattle as in horses, yet they are of a similar kind.
Much additional information of a similar kind must be forthcoming before the source and manner of infection in this disease and its dependence upon external conditions will be known.
Electrical disturbances have an influence of a similar kind, disturbing the functions of the body and favoring sudden variations in the circulation.
The identical cages in which they had been shut up were found still there, and others of a similar kind, ready for the reception of any of the barbarians who might fall into their hands.
And that hence all these solid parts of the body, as they have originally consisted of extremities of nerves, require an apposition of nutritive particles of a similar kind, contrary to the opinion of Buffon and Needham above recited.
Bouguereau has a work of a similar kind, The Lost Pleiad, but here the dancers are upright, and the circle is only accessory to the title figure.
A similar kind of illusion is caused by Rubens in his Diana and Nymphs pursued by Satyrs.
A similar kind of illusion is provided by Burne-Jones, whose Angel of the Annunciation is upright in midair near the ground, but her feet seem to find support on the branches of a shrub.
Mr. Roach Smith has collected several other instances of a similar kind.
These strips slightly overlap each other: a piece of velvet, or other material of a similar kind, is then laid over the whole, and by rows of rivets fastened to the iron splints beneath.
Mr. Neville found at Little Wilbraham, in Cambridgeshire, another example of a similar kind.
Remarks of a similar kind apply to the church in Pergamum.
He is followed by two female figures above a double eagle, in the dress of the main female figure; behind them come thirteen more female figures of a similar kind, with staves or harps in their hands.
Instead of the complete figure of the goddess in this arched attitude, they drew a line of a similar kind, and this was the abbreviated picture of the sky.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "similar kind" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.