Example sentences of "[det] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] all " in BNC.
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1 | For example , ‘ it is self-evident that enslavement as a form of punishment is impossible without a slave economy ; that prison labour is impossible without manufacture or industry , that monetary fines for all classes of society are impossible without a monetary economy ’ . |
2 | Added to which , the entire parcel of land , totalling some fifty acres in all , was earmarked for residential development , or commercial enterprise . |
3 | Some 500 psychologists from all parts of the world meet in Scarborough next month when the British Psychological Society holds its conference there for the first time . |
4 | In the interests of quality assurance , some 120 samples of all raw and processed materials are tested to stringent standards every day . |
5 | Whereas a comprehensive secondary school might offer some 30 subjects for all its pupils , and about a dozen subjects account for the great majority of A levels , the curriculum explodes in higher education , part of a post-school explosion even greater when one takes into account the vast number of technical and vocational courses that exist in non-advanced further education . |
6 | Schedule 2 contains some express guidelines for all contracts relating to the supply of goods , which inevitably have influenced thinking about reasonableness in relation to all types of contracts . |
7 | Allied to the reference work available on open access in the Science Library is a collection of some 50,000 books on all aspects of science and technology , including the commercial application . |
8 | The office will serve people in council homes in Northway , Marston , Cutteslowe , Templar Road , Wolvercote and Kidlington areas , some 1500 homes in all . |
9 | It covered some 2,000 establishments in all sectors of the economy . |
10 | The other engine , Bert has clocked some 10 hours in all . |
11 | Over 100 interviews were carried out , lasting some 170 hours in all , as well as several shorter , informal conversations . |
12 | That was a total of two visits to the crag , some 3 hours in all . |
13 | ‘ I 'm half inclined to pursue her tomorrow ; perhaps if we had her we would have a few more answers to all this . |
14 | The HQ at Mape was bombed , although this did not seriously disrupt the defence plan as four columns of Japanese , some 2,500 troops in all , drove inland ( see map p. 77 ) . |
15 | It is estimated to employ some 750,000 persons in all , with 57,700 persons in direct manufacturing and a further 30,000 in public houses . |
16 | fund , er and we say that er , er we hope your Lordship will be with us on the main issues , but if your not , we say there are very powerful reasons of English and community law including er the obligation on the court under article five , to ensure that the , er the , the trials some two years hence lasting some five weeks with all the expert evidence , my learned friend says will be necessary , should not in the interim have the effect of er frustrating er the operation of er apparently valid provisions in the United Kingdom statutes and the Lloyds Acts and byelaws , which er , are themselves measures that have been adopted so as to pursue the policy |
17 | The comfort of the mattress is determined by the number of springs , which is generally a minimum of 900 , while luxury styles may have two layers of springs and some 2000 springs in all . |
18 | Her lot had not been a happy one : the husband whom she had only ever seen for a few precious weeks in all since their marriage had now left her a widow , without support and with a child and step-children to fend for . |
19 | The next night some hundred men from all companies set forth , but were literally massacred by violent gunfire . |
20 | ‘ I never heard such cheeky kids in all my life . |
21 | Enraged by such unappreciative comments after all the trouble she 'd gone to , Fran swung round and marched ahead , stopping abruptly when she heard the unmistakable sound of his laughter . |
22 | I still have and use some of these old favourites with all the hairs and bristles bent , broken , twisted or near non-existent . |
23 | The question which tends to go unasked is this : Why do individuals go through these three stages at all , and why in that order ? |
24 | Government , employers , trade unionists and educationalists are virtually unanimous in calling for the inclusion of these fundamental skills in all training and education . |
25 | Water must be under public control , he declared , since private exploitation would ruin these fragile lands for all time . |
26 | God has promised to pour out His spirit in these last days on all flesh — this means every field ( Joel 2 : 28–29 ) . |
27 | Among orthodox men of learning the biblical axiom that species are fixed entities established by God at the Creation gradually became qualified by the doctrine of plenitude , the Great Chain of Being , which declared that God , as artist creator , would necessarily have created all possible creatures in all possible worlds , and that the creatures which we now know on earth are but a fraction of those which exist in the universe . |
28 | The use of such tests is a controversial issue , with on the one hand , anti-abortion lobbies arguing that life begins at conception and that therefore all abortion is wrong , through to womens ' groups who believe that such tests should be available to all pregnant women of all ages , so that those who do not wish to take the risk of giving birth to a mentally handicapped child may take the appropriate actions to prevent it . |
29 | However , I thought it right to debate the report of the Select Committee chaired by my right hon. Friend the Member for Westmorland and Lonsdale ( Mr. Jopling ) because many hon. Members of all parties , which was not the case with the other Select Committee report , asked me to find an early opportunity to enable the House to give its initial response to that splendid and important report . |
30 | The European Court binds all English courts on all matters relating to the Treaties by which the EC was formed and EC legislation . |