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

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1 He says the Leeds course has broadened his horizons : ‘ We have people on my course from all over the world so the approach tends to be international .
2 The Science and Engineering Research Council , which is providing the funds for the equipment , will coordinate a programme in which researchers from all over the country' will send specimens to the unit .
3 The NME 's owners , IPC Magazines , rapidly became delighted by the paper 's status and profitability but occasionally embarrassed by the weekly outpourings of radical dementia , its enthusiasm for all ( ahem ) manifestations or rock culture and its ( ahem again ) colourful , demotic language .
4 The proprietors of Elmfield House , Jim and Edith Lillie , were initially a little apprehensive about opening their much restored and much-cared for home to the public — but they soon came to appreciate the friendship and interest given to them by their visitors from all over the world .
5 Rather than delve more into the riches of Dinah 's more earthy blues recordings , it concentrates on her versions of all too familiar standards , the staple diet of supper club crooners the world over ;
6 National newspapers cull their stories from all over the country — often , indeed , from all over the world .
7 To meet the growing demand for bigger and better bangs they import their fireworks from all over the world .
8 MORE than 300 registered childminders and their children from all over Clwyd had a day out at Bodelwyddan Castle yesterday as part of National Childminding Week .
9 But a competition has taken place that proved them wrong.Teams from all over the country battled against the clock to change tyres at Silverstone race circuit .
10 Further , the neat division of society into a minority of freeholders sharply contrasted with the mass of tenant farmers and landless men stops far short of the whole truth in its failure to acknowledge the interest of copyholders whose security of tenure made them freeholders in all but name , or to distinguish leaseholders with long terms from mere tenants at will .
11 A softly-spoken , intense man , he receives hundreds of visitors who come to his home from all over India to view his work .
12 The king 's chivalric reputation attracted men to his service from all over Europe in the 1340s , and it greatly strengthened the bonds between him and the English nobility .
13 A member is more likely to be in trouble with his constituency if he fails to support his party on all ( or most ) occasions .
14 Oh ! he 's got his buttons on all right , that one .
15 We get our conifers from all over .
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