Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] [adv] all [art] " in BNC.

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1 Things that have happened long before he got involved with the club and then all the problems on the field with performances results and injuries .
2 Well , I mean we do n't think , we , it 's , I think it 's unlikely that this is going to , to have any effect until possibly all the f all the tenants are moved out anyway .
3 Most raw materials for industry and almost all the fuel have come from the mainland .
4 A large proportion of these young people should have received help long before they take to such dangerous crime but nearly all the preventative services have been closed over the past five years .
5 It is mercifully the case that almost all the people of this country subscribe , in general terms , to the values of liberty for the individual under the law , and believe that this liberty is least insecure in a parliamentary democracy .
6 The combined effect of these provisions is to give a power of summary arrest in the case of all the more serious offences and many of the most commonly committed offences , e.g. murder , manslaughter , the major offences against the person , offences under the Criminal Damage Act and almost all the Theft Act offences .
7 Rather than you selling it to the boss and then all the trouble .
8 A SYSTEMS crash in the morning and a Stock Exchange bomb scare in the afternoon provided virtually all the excitement on yesterday 's dozy stock market .
9 Er yes , the door opener in fact was was put on wrongly erm by unfortunately P C and er as the pressure started to exert outwards erm it then found that there was no resistance and consequently all the pressure was being put outwards er and as such then the machine started to make a noise erm which then we had to switch it off , turn it round , back on again and eventually gained access .
10 Yeah , they put it all in a computer and then all the words are analyzed and from the different accents and all that sort of , pronunciation .
11 Physics and then all the creative art except cooking .
12 Many physicians from that time forward were of the opinion that nearly all the late complications of syphilis were , in fact , the result of mercury poisoning .
13 The reason for the choice of different time is probably the liking for scenes of stillness rather than action which characterises much early classical art and almost all the subjects ascribed to Polygnotos in the tradition ; in particular the Underworld , the great pair to the Troy in the Delphi club-house .
14 you see the coach come to a standstill and then all the people screaming and trying to get out so I pulled over and just sort of done my best to get 'em out .
15 So you map it onto the tuple array and then all the tuples so you take each tuple in in order .
16 There were many wells in the area and almost all the houses had their own water pumps .
17 In this he was supported by his white Cabinet and nearly all the whites of Rhodesia .
18 For example a chemist will learn about compounds by laboriously memorising as a student the properties of each one separately but eventually sets of compounds are perceived as a pattern and thereafter all the relevant material is readily available because it fits together neatly .
19 While this is true as regards the specific wording of the offence of genocide , it was pointed out in the parliamentary debate relating to the Genocide Bill that almost all the offences included in the Convention were in fact already offences under English law .
20 But the king of Spain wrote in Spanish and almost all the Italian rulers in Italian , while the Scandinavian states , Poland , the Holy Roman Emperor , the Hanse cities and the elector of Saxony used Latin , and the Protestant Swiss cantons wrote in German .
21 You know they , they ran , they took the nurses , because the nurses home was a mile or , was it a mile or a mile and a half or something from the hospital , they had this , they took them in the morning and then they took them at lunchtime and then all the different shifts coming on and off they took them , and they had the schools run as well .
22 The very existence of the interment camps had been a state secret and virtually all the materials on display would have been ‘ classified ’ before the recent revolution .
23 If we conceive the junction points to be embedded then we can consider the lengths of chains between junctions using the random walk arguments of the earlier part of this chapter and derive the free energy for the continuum and therefore all the physical quantities we need .
24 He has never been a road man and now all the dedication at tracks like Aghadowey and Nutt 's Corner as well as Kirkistown has paid off .
25 The reason I ask is this ; Last season my club achieved promotion in the Courage League and naturally all the players were very pleased and excited by the prospect of competing at a higher level of rugby .
26 Many crops are grown from seed every year and so all the necessary genetic mutations would have to happen to a single plant within one growing season .
27 Sometimes there would be two hundred cards on the pavement before someone fluked a cover and then all the cards were his and he cleared the deck .
28 All the girls who were any sort of discipline problem and virtually all the older women ended up in the workroom .
29 It was from Egypt , too , that the Minoans imported a limited range of manufactured goods ; the fact that nearly all the imports of manufactured goods were Egyptian reflects the Minoans ' admiration for Egyptian culture : possibly it was the only culture they regarded as the equal of their own .
30 For example , one might observe the fact that nearly all the world 's languages have the three basic sentence-types : imperative , interrogative and declarative ( Sadock & Zwicky , in press ) .
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