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

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1 And she 's dropped a tin of paint all over her trainers .
2 There was , of course , talk of union all round ; it was in the early 1890s , as we have noted , that the historic divisions between General and Particular Baptists were finally consolidated into the Baptist Union .
3 Went to the Royal Academy when I was doing my 'O' Levels , it was a Jackson follow up it was about , ambulance was about twelve foot by twelve foot , it was literally splodges of paint all over the fucking place , it was horrible , you can actually buy them at the Royal Academy , you ca n't buy them at , but he was asking a hundred thousand pounds for it , I could n't believe it , a trained monkey could of fucking painted that
4 Many can forage above ground at night but they laboriously shield themselves from predators by constructing covered run-ways , and thin crusts of mud all over the vegetation they are plundering .
5 What a growing part of agriculture all over the world had in common was subjection to the industrial world economy .
6 Revolution and change of government all too often mean simply exchanging one set of evils for another .
7 Voting in this space could be a peaceful protest at the performance of all the parties in House , and a warning that the public want change of policy all round .
8 A very inefficient bit of work all round . "
9 No time to get to the shelter , there was a noise of metal all around us .
10 These source rocks are the peridotites , and since geophysics tells us that the mantle consists of the same kind of material all over the world , it 's clear that melting part of the mantle beneath Hawaii should produce the same kind of rocks as those produced by melting part of the mantle beneath Iceland .
11 To some extent , little or much , the Created God has been in course of production all over the world for all time .
12 Our task today is to increase the international pressure on behalf of the thousands of prisoners of conscience all over the world , to make tomorrow the day their freedom is restored .
13 The event was held in the school library and messages of hope were written to prisoners of conscience all over the world .
14 The flavouring vegetables are 2 each of large carrots , leeks , onions and tomatoes ; a bouquet of herbs consisting of parsley stalks , a piece of celery , a bay leaf and a crushed clove of garlic all tied together ; 1 tablespoon of salt .
15 We had a good field of fire all round in case the enemy came out of the sunken road or over the hedge .
16 Alix was working on a customer , a young cinder-head naked on his belly on her couch , lasers primed and crouching like birds of prey all around .
17 The fact that everyone was waving tiny American flags made this spectacle of labour all the more bizarre .
18 I could not see the land , only mountains of water all around me .
19 You keep meeting the same people in a sector of industry all over the world . ’
20 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 ?
21 It 's some sort of fraud all right .
22 Electronic mail makes the importance of context all the clearer .
23 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 .
24 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 .
25 As I stood up , I heard cries of astonishment all around me .
26 There is going to be a serious shortage of food all over the world during the next year .
27 With the beginning of Exodus all again was spoiled .
28 The trouble was that the land belonged to a family who lived in London and owned parcels of land all over the country and had so far resisted all attempts to relinquish this innocuous piece of British soil .
29 Particularly in the streets that have undergone a great deal of change since the war , like the street where I live myself , which is another thing that prompted me to , to go into the research in the first place , which is erm a house of small Victorian erm I believe the estate agents call them artisans ' cottages , and this kind of area which , there 's a great deal of this sort of property in Brighton , has undergone enormous changes since the war from being multi-occupied before the war , with one family on each floor , were regarded immediately after the war as slums and were scheduled for demolition , but they 've been a great lease of life all over the country , this sort of property , and been subjected to a process which has come to be known as gentrification , which has meant that when the middle class could n't afford to , to buy semi-detached in suburbs they took to buying this kind of smaller property in town centres , thereby introducing a whole new element into streets that had never seen these , this kind of things done to houses before .
30 I am sure that those who share my professional experience will agree that those who have trodden in the mire of corruption all too easily become corrupt to the core .
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