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

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1 The consultants LMG Associates Ltd , working in collaboration with Sheffield Hallam University , have been appointed to conduct a comprehensive mapping exercise and initial analysis of job function of all scientists , of all disciplines and at all levels of qualification .
2 They are among the safest of all sections of the community using the roads , simply because they rely entirely upon their sight at all times and under all circumstances . "
3 Example 2:6 Right of way : unlimited times and vehicles The right in common with the landlord and all others having the like right to pass and repass ( but not to park or except in emergency to stop ) with or without vehicles at all times and for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property ( but not otherwise ) over the road coloured on the attached plan Example 2:7 Right of way : limited times and vehicles ; right to load , etc The right in common with the landlord and all others having the like right to pass and repass on foot and with vehicles not exceeding … feet in length or … tonnes ( unladen weight ) at any time between 6 am on Monday and 8 pm on Friday in each week ( except public holidays ) for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property ( but not otherwise ) over the road coloured on the attached plan and to park any such vehicle for such period as may be reasonable for the purpose only of loading or unloading it Example 2:8 Right of way : right to load etc in loading bay The right at all times with or without vehicles to pass and repass over the road leading from to the demised property ( but not to halt or park any vehicle thereon except in case of emergency ) for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property and the right for the same purposes to use the loading bay coloured on the attached plan for loading and unloading any such vehicle ( b ) Stairs and passages In a lease of property on an upper floor of a building there will be implied an easement of necessity to use a staircase that is its sole means of access ( Altmann v Boatman ( 1963 ) 186 EG 109 ) .
4 The only difference is ‘ that whereas some one finite and narrow assemblage of ideas denotes a particular human mind , whithersoever we direct our view , we do at all times and in all places perceive manifest tokens of the divinity ’ .
5 Despite Berkeley 's claim that ‘ we do at all times and in all places perceive manifest tokens of the divinity ’ , the important place occupied by God in his philosophy will inevitably seem as far removed from immediate experience as the material world of seventeenth-century philosophy seemed to Berkeley .
6 Clement circumvented the difficulty by interpreting the incarnation in one particular corner of the world as a specially significant moment in a universal care for all humanity at all times and in all places .
7 This need not , however , suggest ( as Saunders sometimes does indeed imply ) that owner-occupation is at all times and in all places an optimum means of gaining control over one 's own life .
8 This is only as one might expect -at all times and in all places — for it is always a problem in art history or archaeology to know to what degree certain persons can be held responsible for the appearance of particular aspects of design ( especially where one is dealing with aspects of arrangement , structure , and figural types ) .
9 All that has been written above about the identification of the goodness of Christ 's teachings with the objectives of the creation of the Created God , can be applied equally to the teachings of the outstanding figures of all religions and of all religious history .
10 " With regard to the Native custom affecting cases of this kind , there is possibly no definite rule that can be made applicable to all cases and to all districts , but this rule appears to be applicable everywhere , that when a woman of one tribe or hapu marries into another tribe or hapu , her rights become extinguished , unless some act of ownership is exercised either by herself or her immediate descendants .
11 So that one bargain could be fairly compared with another , the cost of borrowing — the interest charged — should in all cases and by all lenders be expressed in terms of an Annual Percentage Rate ( APR ) , not solely in weekly or monthly interest .
12 The building itself and the woodland environs remain an inspiration to all artists and to all art form .
13 The group welcomes amateurs and professionals of all ages and at all levels , and stresses that even the absolute beginner can come along unabashed .
14 The group welcomes amateurs and professionals of all ages and at all levels , and stresses that even the absolute beginner can come along unabashed .
15 Similar attitudes of troops of occupation of all ages and in all places , from South America to India , help us understand the revulsion now felt by many Britons , some of whom may have been sympathetic to Rome and hopeful of recognition of their natural rights and dignity .
16 The country has a huge population of heroin addicts , homosexuality is widely practised , and men of all ages and from all classes make regular use of the big cities ' vast red-light districts .
17 Literally thousands of people have benefited form Nancy 's instruction and she has perhaps been one of the greatest advocates of the Sunday Painter school , encouraging an increase in the popularity of painting as a pastime for people of all ages and from all walks of life .
18 They would have been reluctant to admit that the human mind , confronted with the mysteries of life and death , has found some common ground in all cultures and in all known periods of history .
19 We can not assume that these interpretations will be made in the same way in all cultures and in all languages , so understanding how interpretation proceeds in the culture of the language we are teaching is crucial if we are to help foreign learners to make their words function in the way that they intend .
20 We can not assume that these interpretations will be made in the same way in all cultures and in all languages , so understanding how interpretation proceeds in the culture of the language we are teaching is crucial if we are to help foreign learners to make their words function in the way that they intend .
21 Internally , each net has nodes with interconnections from all inputs and to all outputs .
22 Bishop Daley said we must appeal repeatedly to those faceless heartless murderers of all organizations and to all those who identify with them to stop their diabolical activities .
23 But there are many other interesting studies going on , concerned with all aspects and at all levels of education .
24 The Secretaries of State will therefore seek to establish a broad agreement with their partners in the educational service on a framework for the curriculum , and in particular on whether , because there are aims common to all schools and to all pupils at certain stages , there should be a ‘ core ’ or ‘ protected ’ part .
25 The era of free competition in the capitalist economy is over in all areas and in all respects .
26 It is the creation of a ‘ standard ’ enshrined in a ‘ god ’ that can be accepted by people from all countries and of all races that is utterly vital .
27 Thus it is clear that to develop heavy industry one must increase the supply of products at all costs and by all means .
28 Unlike singular statements , they refer to all events of a particular kind at all places and at all times .
29 The benefits of stretching for people from all sports and of all ages can not be overemphasised .
30 For all tastes and for all occasions
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