Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun sg] have [vb pp] all " in BNC.

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1 That cynical interpretation of the commitment of all those dedicated professionals who are carrying forward the first wave of trusts is so bitterly resented by the health service , which is why the Labour party has lost all credibility with the health professionals .
2 When the Hon. Gentleman has seen all the details , he should compare them with what went on in the valleys when he was a Minister .
3 The Central Bank has frozen all remittances of profits , dividends and interest .
4 She left the following year having exhausted all the tuition the school could offer .
5 The Prime Minister has made all those promises .
6 At crisis talks in London , the Prime Minister has warned all sides involved in the strife in the former Yugoslavia that they must compromise or face total isolation .
7 Bush ended the primary process having won all 38 of the Republican contests , matching the record established by Richard Nixon in 1972 and Ronald Reagan in 1984 , both of whom later won landslide victories in the presidential elections .
8 The American Princess — even the poor doctor has heard all about her , and then you came into my home …
9 ‘ Well , ’ he mumbled , ‘ the great frost has killed all trade in the city .
10 The courageous two-year-old has spent all his short life in hospital .
11 Belgrade radio , reporting an FEC session , said that the federal army had stopped all its activities " as it has accomplished the planned tasks " .
12 The Taiwanese government has denied all the allegations .
13 A shipload of food and medical aid from Italy reached Albania on March 19 , one day after the Albanian government had placed all food distribution in the country under police control in an attempt to counteract speculation .
14 Already the senior nurse has seen all the patients and there will be a psychological follow-up in the next few weeks . ’
15 Luke 's dismissal of Elise as a mere client had rekindled all her misgivings .
16 It was as though the wind and tide had decided to have a good rest having expended all its fury achieving the high water mark .
17 By contrast , the consequences and so competences , and hence the adequacies or inadequacies , of natural selection , especially for long-run effects , were practically impossible to decide , at least for a finite intellect ; although the young Darwin himself could consistently suppose that God in choosing this means for adapting life to a changing earth had foreseen all its consequences .
18 He must have a computerised brain to have absorbed all that information over a period of years without having compiled a ‘ silly tick list ’ himself .
19 No one , not even the Emperor , had fought so many battles , and no other General had won all the battles he had ever fought , though the Duke , as every person in the ballroom was aware , had never fought the Emperor .
20 Dworkin himself suggests that no one has an individual right to have enforced all the laws of the nation , only those which he would have a right to have enacted if they were not already law .
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