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

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1 It was this hegemonic combination of a mighty domestic economy , a progressive ruling class ( in comparison with most others actually existing ) , and at least some desirable culturalideological features particularly attractive to ‘ modernizing ’ elites , that opened the global door to them and ensured the creation , persistence and often aggrandisement of social classes in countries all over the world willing and eager to adopt their transnational practices .
2 One only has to look at the diminishing casts in productions all over the country .
3 We assist in the movement of products and raw materials between nations all over the world .
4 Russia contains 20 different races of people all with deep rooted beliefs , values and rivalries between each race .
5 If you are so concerned with the kindly nurture of infants , I suggest you turn your journalistic — conscience — to those children begotten by inadequate stupid parents being reared in appalling conditions in slums all over the country .
6 The Pope 's 450-page draft text has been drawn up with the help of 24,000 suggestions from bishops all over the world .
7 The wives of both branch deputies have given birth recently with two members of management pregnant and six members of staff all in the ‘ Newbury club ’ .
8 ‘ So many separate bits of evidence all pointing in the same direction .
9 The worship of , or professed belief in , a god of some kind is to be found in varying degrees of sincerity all over the world .
10 Rose followed Sid into the small kitchen at Blue Horizons and was immediately enveloped in a paradise of smells , reminiscent of childhood , the spices of exotic cooking and the warm scents of Provence all rolled into one .
11 So what we do on wallets we send we have people for three days in house all right ?
12 The fact that the Council 's Structure Plan , in which their planning policy is enshrined , has not yet been accepted by the Secretary of State makes these changes in direction all the easier .
13 Most of all , he was a campaigner for human rights for writers all over the world .
14 There are many cheeses that are similar to Brie and Camembert but produced in different shapes or sold at differing stages of ripeness. all are referred to as surface-ripened , containing bacteria on their developing white rinds .
15 There were little spots of cement all along the top , where the railings had been torn out in the war .
16 The under-21s were without John Stannard , their number one short corner specialist , whose car broke down en route , but they managed comfortable wins in the regional qualifiers with goals all scored from open play .
17 His mother had said that it was all very well to mock but she had stood many long hours at auctions all over the city finding the right pieces .
18 There is going to be all forms of Jihad all over the world because there is a sacred element , there is an element erm of er which is the presence of a foreign non-Muslim force in the Holy Land ; this is a very explosive element .
19 Suddenly , as we were about fifty yards from that lovely smell of coffee , there was an almighty roar as the barn blew up , scattering burning straw and all kinds of debris all over the farm area .
20 Some firms of English solicitors have branch offices in the major centres of commerce all over the world , to advise local clients on English law .
21 Dee makes plenty of long journeys to clubs all over the country usually in a hired Ford Fiesta , as he does n't own a car .
22 Correspondingly , high-level achievements in research all too easily serve as a sufficient criterion for academic excellence .
23 There were many representatives from churches all over our diocese who went to lobby their MPs .
24 Another notable promotion , to the trade this time , involved Picador 's sending pairs of pink knickers to booksellers all over the country — mostly men — to promote Tama Janowitz' new novel , The Male Cross-Dresser Support Group .
25 At the moment it was the traditional tale of going up to Jackson 's at 10 in the morning after an all-night session at Dobell 's — wine we drank in those days , Poppet , wine that was wine not this filthy MUCK — and demanding double portions of oysters all round and when it came to pay no one had a penny , so Dobell , who even then still had the charm of a boy of twenty , and a slim waist to go with it , said he would bring in one of the engravings from his collection , and Gaston , who always recognised a gentleman — not like the CLODS who run hostelries nowadays — with tears in his eyes said it was an honour , an honour to serve Mr Dobell and his friends .
26 The trouble was that the land belonged to a family who lived in London and owned parcels of land all over the country and had so far resisted all attempts to relinquish this innocuous piece of British soil .
27 Due to the obsession of most comparative sociologists with problems of measurement , all sight of a global system was lost in the mists of dubious generalization about a host of discrete variables from societies all over the world .
28 Many can forage above ground at night but they laboriously shield themselves from predators by constructing covered run-ways , and thin crusts of mud all over the vegetation they are plundering .
29 Presented by Michaela Strachan , the programme has been homing in on different varieties of animals and conservation projects in countries all around the world .
30 And , after some 40 exhibitions in cities all over the world , she can boast that every one of her 1,000 well-loved paintings has been sold , apart from a few she has deliberately reserved for herself .
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