Example sentences of "[conj] all [noun pl] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Certainly this is envisaged in the procedural rules which allow a single justice or a justices ' clerk to grant repeat applications for interim orders where all parties consent and the terms of the order are unchanged ( FPCR , r28 ) .
2 By G. L. TURNBULL , Principal , Trinity & All Saints College
3 This would suggest that there is an existing Home or All Risks insurance in force .
4 An item insured separately under a Home or All Risks section is more specifically insured .
5 IT , OT and CTT policies do not include a ‘ more specifically insured ’ exclusion so even if an expensive ring for example , which may be lost or stolen , is separately insured under a Home or All Risks policy we can still only deal with this on an independent liability basis .
6 The one complication is that all Windows applications place the same sort of minimum demands on a machine and so if you want to work in a Windows environment you will have to add the extra requirements to machine fit to run Windows .
7 Group welfare officer Sheila Redmond said : ‘ It is important that all women employees treat smear testing very seriously and take advantage of this opportunity .
8 Further investigation would demonstrate that all interests theories depend , in the last resort , upon principles of distributive justice which identify those interests that deserve protection .
9 The problem stems from the fact that all effects devices , whether digital or analogue , rack-mounting or the compact variety , all have one thing in common : they generate noise .
10 The hard disk is now down to 50% , and it is estimated that all non-Accounts files will be off the system by the end of June .
11 The EC announced on Jan. 15 that all CIS members had accepted EC guidelines for recognition [ see p. 38685 ] and were therefore officially accepted by the EC as independent states .
12 But surely , says Gassendi , it is ‘ better known ’ that all men laugh than that all rational beings do .
13 Now we , we do know that 's a problem , the police service know it 's a problem , and the Chief Constable 's come up with these er these performance targets , where he 's try he 's promising to the public that he 's going to endeavour to make sure that all police telephone calls are answered within certain time periods .
14 Mr Yeltsin has supported such reforms while trade unions have suggested that all savings accounts above a certain level should be wiped out .
15 If it is the defining error or empiricism to assume that only statements meant to be checked up on deserve serious attention , it is the defining error or the new French criticism ( Foucault , Piaget , Barthes , Derrida and others ) to assume that because some statements can not be verified , no statements can , and hence that all statements rail to refer , leaving us with discourse — language without anchorage in time , psyche or history .
16 This growing discontent has been symbolized by Koreans refusing to comply with the stipulation that all aliens resident in Japan for any length of time have to be re-registered as aliens and fingerprinted at regular intervals , and carry alien registration cards with them at all times .
17 By a notice of appeal dated 12 December 1990 the plaintiffs appealed on the grounds , inter alia , ( 1 ) that the judge erred in law in holding that the first defendant was entitled to add to any security , all the costs charges and expenses , however unreasonable they were ; ( 2 ) the judge failed to follow the decision in In re Adelphi Hotel ( Brighton ) Ltd. [ 1953 ] 1 W.L.R. 955 ; ( 3 ) the judge erred in law in construing the charging covenants of the legal mortgage which were all in similar terms that all costs charges and expenses howsoever incurred by the first defendant or any receiver under or in relation to the mortgage or such indebtedness or liabilities on a full indemnity basis as allowing the first defendant to charge as it pleased however unreasonable such a charge might be ; and ( 4 ) the judge erred in law in not construing that provision as a provision providing for taxation or computation on an indemnity basis of the first defendant 's costs , charges and expenses .
18 We must also ensure that teaching is seen to be important , and a simple way to start is to insist that all doctors must document their experience when applying for jobs and that all appointments committees should ask about it .
19 Here again it is very important to ensure that all names titles are spelt correctly .
20 However , even if we accept the argument that the ‘ best ’ subjects are those which are most useful to industry , this does not necessarily mean that all physical scientific subjects are more useful than all humanities subjects .
21 2.10 " the 1954 Act " means the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 [ and all statutes regulations and orders included by virtue of clause 3.16 ]
22 2.13 " the Planning Acts " means the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 [ and all statutes regulations and orders included by virtue of clause 3.16 ]
23 His predominant mode , in the Clarendon Building and All Souls designs and at Queen 's , as well as in other works , such as the Christ Church buttery ( 1722 ) and his Durham quadrangle range at Trinity College ( 1728 ) , was a simplified version of the baroque of Hawksmoor and Sir John Vanbrugh [ q.v. ] ; but the fellows ' building at Corpus Christi College , of which he may have been the designer as well as the builder , was close to the proto-Palladian manner of the Peckwater quadrangle , while his Radcliffe quadrangle at University College ( 1717–19 ) — again devised under Clarke 's direction — and his additions at Oriel College ( 1719–20 ) were faithful copies of the traditional Jacobean style of the adjoining buildings , the former including a skilfully executed Gothic vault .
24 Born in Galway , studied at Mungret College , Limerick , where he developed a taste for rugby football , and All Hallows College , Dublin , where he was ordained to the priesthood on June 24th , 1944 .
25 This year I felt it best to avoid wine and all things Canadian lest anyone had a good memory .
26 Because we ourselves are Italian we live and breathe Italy and all things Italian , we see places all the year round — not just during a brief flying visit which is all other operators can afford .
27 Its aim is to increase the public 's awareness of funerary culture and all things death-related by illustrating human attitudes to death at different periods of history .
28 The priest was dying with a last Gloria on his lips , and Harry , carried away upon a tide of hatred for all things Spanish and all things Catholic , had already sunk the blade into the back of the young hidalgo .
29 Bianca , sitting boldly upright in her kayak Svalbard , is suspicious of us and aggressively protective of Norway and all things Norwegian .
30 It was safer to believe that all women were opportunists and all friends traitors .
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