Example sentences of "[noun] of [noun] all " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 Acting as Port Agent for P&O Cruises for the first time , Ellerman & Bucknall were responsible for a range of activities all aimed at ensuring a trouble free visit for Canberra in both Durban and Cape Town .
32 To me there are prototypes of Alf all over the country : far too many of them in fact .
33 A tiny creature which cuts a tracery of lines all over the surface of floating foliage .
34 The hot alpine summers of recent years have made these sort of conditions all too prevalent , particularly early in the season when there are masses of spring snow ready to melt .
35 Right and I want you to plan to do that for a call tonight in order to what you would say to this sort of person all right ?
36 So , there are these sort of centres all over the country , er but this is the first time that there has been one that has arts and science under the same room .
37 It 's some sort of fraud all right .
38 ( as if such undesirables were not precisely the sort of candidates all too often put up by parties and elected by voters in both British and Irish constituencies ! )
39 For an entry fee of £4 all finishers get a T-shirt plus a £5 voucher for Lifestyle Sport Shops .
40 No , ffeatherstonehaugh 's understood the point of women all right .
41 Electronic mail makes the importance of context all the clearer .
42 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 .
43 One of the results of the quantitative increase in material culture , providing new domains of representation all working in particular ways , is to complicate further the problem of what may be termed material ideology .
44 Offering up a quick prayer that she would n't bump into any of the other cast members en route , she slipped into the corridor and made her way to Dane 's room , pausing at his door to steel herself as another onrush of nerves all but paralysed her .
45 Yesterday , at the railway embankment , he and a group of friends all reckoned to know the two youths who abducted two-year-old James .
46 Each programme is operated by a group of people all working towards some organizational objective and headed by a manager who is responsible for their actions .
47 After a time I found a group of people all sitting on some narrow stairs .
48 As I stood up , I heard cries of astonishment all around me .
49 If you ask me , it looks like a load of picture of heads all over the bloody place !
50 The significance of the birth of Christ is not the sudden appearance of angels all over the place , but the fact that such an important person was born in the most humble surroundings — in a poor and lowly stable .
51 Not only can we use the considerable buying power of Guinness to get the best prices , but we can use our knowledge of suppliers all over the world to ensure the highest quality product .
52 There are coats of arms all around the Chamber of hon. Members who gave their lives for peace in Europe .
53 The systems division is still not profitable after charging research and development expenditure , but services — technical support , third-party maintenance , consulting , are said to be very profitable and represent 30% of receivables all told .
54 Nearly 30% of Americans all over the country surveyed by the Washington Post said they feared their city would be subject to a terrorist attack .
55 There is going to be a serious shortage of food all over the world during the next year .
56 Grandson Richard , 39 , was in a crush of people all heading the same way .
57 With the beginning of Exodus all again was spoiled .
58 Steve Ainscough of Gathurst , Craig Fort of Nelson , Daniel Harding of Worsley , Grant Hamerton of Manchester and Paul Dwyer of Clitheroe all won to help halve the singles , Denton 's Bob Bardsley was Lancashire 's only early winner .
59 Such an approach , while making the double taxation of profits all too likely , in theory does away with fake transfer pricing within multinational groups and therefore has some merit ( see page 83 ) .
60 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 .
  Previous page   Next page