Example sentences of "[adv] [art] whole of " in BNC.

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1 But eventually the whole of your body lands up at the central point — so everything in the end gets crushed . ’
2 He started in plastics , working from Coventry and Spondon , and joined Courtaulds Central Trading in the mid-1970s — a move that took him to East Germany , Yugoslavia and eventually the whole of Eastern Europe .
3 Suddenly the whole of his existence was engulfed in an inferno of blinding blue light .
4 Suddenly the whole of the Fault Locator lights up , showing that all the controls of the TARDIS have broken down .
5 If the material is completely fractured naturally the whole of this energy is in the end released .
6 I think the bit that stands up above the horizon is fine , I mean I think that gives you a good idea of what it would have been like had you been able to get the whole , or not perhaps the whole of it , but a lot more of the post up above the horizon simply by getting down lower .
7 So the whole of Bloxwich Home Guard really started
8 You have a half of it so the whole of it .
9 So the whole of the planet 's energy existence depends upon research chemistry .
10 The notion of a ‘ cultural economy ’ informs pretty much the whole of Pierre Bourdieu 's sociology of culture .
11 As we have seen , some of the earlier and more enthusiastic apologists for pluralism , such as Dahl and Plamenatz , did suggest both that the spread of pressure and interest groups covered more or less the whole of society and also that such groups competed with each other on a roughly equal basis .
12 You know sometimes the way forward is backward , there are no short cuts with god , if he 's leading along a certain path and were disobedient , there 's no way we can opt out of it and join the trail further along , he does n't allow it , its back to where we left it , that 's were we 've got ta get back to , we ca n't skip an experience , we ca n't miss any thing out , we 've got to go back to where we start , where we were when we left the trail and Naomi has to do just that to go back to Bethlehem , that 's the way forward for her , and you see because we all , we always find this if we are really children of god , then we can never ever be satisfied away from the will of god , there 's nothing else that meets our need , its god will or nothing , you know , when we know frustration in our lives , when we know sort of the , these annoyances and , and , and , and er sense of frustration there , its not because god is leaving us that way its invariably cos we have actually gone out of gods will because he 's will is not frustrated , its satisfying , can I just , it will only really be headings this morning , just leave us with three brief headings in this little incident that we 'll read or we , we wo n't read the whole passage but its , er in the remainder of the , or more or less the whole of the remainder of the first chapter tha that the cost was involved and then the choices that were made and then the commitment , the cost that was involved Naomi had to pay something , you see before she could return to Naomi she had to con , before Naomi sorry could return er to , to Bethlehem , she had to acknowledge she 'd done wrong , she had failed , she had sinned , she had to acknowledge she had made a mistake now in fairness to Naomi she did it and she excepted her responsibility , she did n't try and shift the blame on
13 As long as power oscillated between two evenly-balanced parties , who shared more or less the whole of the vote , the election of a minority government did n't matter too much .
14 Have you been able to gather together the whole of your father 's former collection ?
15 If one took analogies seriously and from such a definition … of ‘ so-called primitive capitalist accumulation ’ , then literally the whole of capitalism , right up to its death would end up in the ‘ pre-history ’ of capitalism : for capitalism obtains surplus profits from ‘ third persons ’ throughout its entire existence ; there is and will be no such stage in the life of capitalism when profits were not to come its way on the basis of exploitation of third persons .
16 Okay , so a whole of things to think about , certainly for the role plays tomorrow but , indeed , for a situation back in the real world .
17 Here again , in 1857 , statute took away the whole of the matrimonial jurisdiction from the Ecclesiastical Courts and vested it in a new court , the Divorce Court , which was enabled to do not only everything that the Ecclesiastical Court could have done , but also what previously needed the combined efforts of the Ecclesiastical Courts , the Common Law Courts , and an Act of Parliament .
18 ‘ Listen , ’ I replied , ‘ pretty soon the whole of south-west London is going to be under the iron heel of Argol of the planet Tellenor .
19 Thus the whole of Galician life and politics came to centre round theforos , the quasi-emphyteutic tenure on which these minute plots were held .
20 And of course you do realize with the greenhouse effect anyway the whole of Orford 's gon na disappear under water and Aldringham and Leiston .
21 Normally the whole of the ‘ E ’ segment is for grabs — that is , from E000 to EFFF — which would add another 64Kb to your Upper memory .
22 the Government will throw aside the whole of these [ competition ] plans and consider what accommodation it is they want , and what sum of money they are prepared to propose to Parliament , and then let them obtain plans suited to the expenditure they propose .
23 Having failed dismally with a bicycle pump and an unidentified device that I found at the back of my Dad 's garden shed , I stumbled across what seemed like a promising routine and set aside the whole of Boxing Day to test it out .
24 On the large sideboard that covered nearly the whole of one wall statues of the Virgin and Child , as well as the holy family , stood silently .
25 He regards PR as a crucial issue and when told that one of its main criticisms is that it produces indecisive government , he came out with that wonderfully ironic comment — ‘ like the weak old government in Switzerland and in Germany and nearly the whole of Europe ’ .
26 Astley he retained until the end of his life , despite mounting worry about the expense , and spent nearly the whole of his retirement there .
27 The night of his arrival the Palace was broken into , and among the items stolen was nearly the whole of his plate .
28 Blue Worcester plates took up nearly the whole of one wall ; others overlapped in a china cupboard .
29 The position then is this : we are investigating the equilibrium of normal demand and normal supply in their most general form ; we are neglecting those features which are special to particular parts of economic science , and are confining our attention to those broad relations which are common to nearly the whole of it .
30 You are perhaps aware ’ , wrote Gould grandly to William Swainson in January 1837 , ‘ that I have two of Mrs Goulds ’ brothers in Australia engaged in collecting the natural product of that fine country , nearly the whole of which are consigned to myself and that consequently I possess perhaps greater facilities than most persons for the production of a work of this description .
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