Example sentences of "[det] [noun pl] [prep] all " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | A few clubs with all the money and all the best players . |
2 | ‘ I bet you tell some whoppers to all your lovers . |
3 | The National Curriculum is certainly not a complete curriculum , it stated : the whole curriculum must include for all pupils ( and in some cases at all stages ) areas of learning which , though not separately identified , are nonetheless ‘ clearly required ’ . |
4 | It was accepted that there are some cases before all tribunals where legal representation is needed . |
5 | I do hope it works out for him and am sure he has not found these last few months at all easy as he starts his working life . |
6 | . Some aspects of all these elements of our information systems will be essential to understanding the present in the future . |
7 | You see , there are some advantages after all . ’ |
8 | But I 've been surprised over the last erm few years of all these young men erm who have restored this museum who , although were not even born in those years , have taken a tremendous interest in what went on and erm well their results , some of their results you can see here today . |
9 | You will not be in a condition to care about shaving , for example , for a few days in all probability anyway . |
10 | Should be able to find some reviews amongst all the old copies . |
11 | It seems that we do have some rights after all ! |
12 | We shall see that in the nineteenth century this limited and special capacity was extended with some modifications to all married women ( see pp. 50–4 ) ; but that in 1935 it was swept away , and married women were given the same capacity to own property and make contracts as a man . |
13 | With the support of the ESRC the investigator has completed a statistical base for the study OI Soviet economic assistance to the less developed countries ( LDCs ) , analysing the method used , giving some historical background and giving some details of all the aid agreements reached and the progress made on their implementation . |
14 | Yet at a time when decisive action against the Nazis might still have been effective the Swiss Carl Burckhardt made very few decisions at all . |
15 | The danger is that in the ensuing artificial competition it may not be possible to establish some markets at all , and traders would then be forced to use less efficient over-the-counter markets , which are conceivably harder to regulate and thus more prone to fraud . |
16 | Below are a few tips from all of us at RUNNING Magazine to help you as the hours count down . |
17 | I just said oh can I have some reports of all the students ? |
18 | By this arrangement we could position Viking almost to the nearest few inches with all the lines taut , a degree of control which was most essential in view of our position and the variations of tide and swell . |
19 | It is probably fair to say that very few hotels in all of Italy can pride themselves on such an enviable position as the Hotel Italia . |
20 | I just stood and stared for a few moments amid all the activity that was going on around the wounded Lovat . |
21 | Each of these labels indicates an aspect of study that has something in common , and our use of ‘ information skills ’ includes some parts of all of them ‘ ( p 11 ) . |
22 | ‘ There are some similarities in all of these incidents which we are aware of , so that is obviously uppermost in our minds . ’ |
23 | He reared 20 colonies from such backcrosses in all . |
24 | In the 16 years in which we have had our part of the legislation , we have applied for only 31 people to be tried in the Republic , of whom only 16 were convicted and the Irish Republic has not applied for any such cases at all . |
25 | In return , local authorities were empowered to appoint the teachers in such schools for all subjects other than religious instruction . |
26 | There were probably no more than two such staffs in all the cities of the circle sea . |
27 | very much plants at all . |
28 | We are called upon to make such statements in all sorts of circumstances in our constituencies and sometimes we do it slightly with tongue in cheek , but I can genuinely make such a statement about many homes . |
29 | ‘ Meself , I do n't know why he bothers with such things at all . |
30 | Studying the semantic features of texts is inevitably rather an intuitive business , and in so far as we can quantify such features at all , it often seems best to attach them to grammatical labels ( eg " colour adjectives " , " adverbials of place " ) , and to use some arbitrary standard of measurement , such as number of words . |