Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [conj] [adv] all " in BNC.

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1 However , this does not necessarily imply that virtually all use of heroin leads to a daily habit , but only that those who contact these agencies have established daily use of the drug .
2 Colin Gunton has recently written , It is now widely accepted that almost all intellectual advance takes place by means of metaphor …
3 The Hungarians attempted to create a marcher zone to protect their frontier against the Turks by supporting Bosnian resistance in the area between Jajce and the Sava , but after the battle of Mohács in 1526 these pockets of resistance soon collapsed and virtually all Bosnia and Hercegovina lay under the rule of the sultans until the late nineteenth century .
4 First , the financial year has just ended and not all the figures are available , Secondly , the department appears to have trouble digging out the relevant information even when it applies to previous years .
5 Now inspection of a series of men 's hands will quickly demonstrate that not all of their fingernails are 100% clean .
6 I can also appreciate that not all the statistics requested necessarily will be to hand but hope you can provide as much information as possible .
7 While emphasising the interdependence between semantic expres-sions and underlying cognitive concepts , this approach also implies that not all of a child 's understanding of a particular experience may be expressed in language , and that a child may intend to express more than she is actually able to encode formally in language structures .
8 Our journey was now planned as downhill all the way to Vietas , some six days away .
9 I had surely noticed that nearly all the ingredients had come on to the train fresh ?
10 Please note that not all hotels have cots and we therefore advise you to take a travel cot where possible .
11 So it remains to be seen whether we may have such a network , or perhaps even assuming that nearly all the cheap oil runs out , whether we might in fact manufacture petrol artificially from wood , coal , or gas , simply to provide the excellent fuel with its wonderful storage characteristics for long distance transport .
12 Consequently one 's own pleas and the sufferer 's promises may all be well meant but nonetheless all equally ineffective in controlling the longer term progression of addictive disease .
13 Dunlop 's surplus was therefore distributed and nearly all of it went to Morrison to put him 819 above McLachlan which was much more than the undistributed surplus of Lindsay .
14 Hair apparently benefited : of the 120 volunteers a total of 37 stated that the condition of their hair had actually improved whilst almost all the remainder reported no deterioration whatsoever .
15 Indeed one can safely say that almost all of our roads and tracks were used in medieval times and perhaps most were also used in the prehistoric period as well .
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