Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] all [art] " in BNC.
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1 | The two main actors create a reflective , needy relationship together made all the more poignant by the airman 's total lack of English and Jones 's zilch German so that they communicate haltingly and stiltedly , mirroring the route of their hesitant trust . |
2 | Just after a relationship has come to an end , the contrast will be naturally felt all the more strongly . |
3 | This realism has obviously become all the more desirable since the genesis of Fords . |
4 | By and large it does not , and it certainly did not in Margaret 's case : she merely laughed all the more , and sang the taunting hymns of her new faith , about how tyrants would be put down from their thrones and the humble and the meek raised up . |
5 | So do all the lemon recipes which I have chosen for this article . |
6 | So do all the roofs in the government housing projects and many private houses . |
7 | Those obviously include all the further education colleges that do the basic um and the basic things and then the H N C H N D it gives you the open learning things which includes then the private sector people communicate and all sorts of other agencies , erm it depends really what you see as a beginner , do you mean a beginner in the communications field in its entirety , or do you mean a beginner as an in-house industrial editor or a freelancer by definition a beginner is not likely to be a freelancer ? |
8 | The woman was probably in her middle forties , with a body that looked strong rather than fat under the shapeless clothes , and a long lined face that had already done all the ageing it was likely to . |
9 | His manners to her had always been impeccable , which made what he was shortly to do all the more shocking . |
10 | One of them , recently relieved of a large Norwegian and still visibly tense , said she 'd lost interest in food and would settle for not having all the cup handles knocked off . |
11 | She was n't mean about it , she was very grateful to have someone to talk to and I used to try to spend a lot of time with her just to cheer her up — you know , walk the dog with her and go shopping — just do all the things that would help . |
12 | We always done all the tea , the cakes and everything . |
13 | ‘ In the past , I 've used researchers to dig around in libraries , but I 've always done all the hard work myself , and certainly all the major interviews . |
14 | She , and many of the women like her whom I met , still does all the housework , just like before , and on top of that has to manage the effect of her husband 's traumatic discovery of something women have always known — what it feels like to be economically dependent . |
15 | ‘ You 'll probably feel all the better for it . |
16 | The coordinator or a member of the radiology referral review committee also visited all the larger general practices to explain the purpose of the study , to show the participating practitioners the guideline booklet , and to obtain their approval . |
17 | And it also becomes all the more important to provide the context . |
18 | ( She also does all the lovely flower arrangements for which she has won an award . ) |
19 | Gods whose ways co-existed with farming and nature now functioned all the better in the guise of saints . |
20 | The question as to what preparation these teachers receive in order to perform their roles is consequently posed all the more sharply . |
21 | Actually , I sent Felicity to Summerhill because I saw this awfully exciting film called The Alamo , starring John Wayne , whom I adore , and he makes this absolutely glorious speech in it which goes ‘ Freedom , I like the sound of the word ’ , actually it 's ‘ Republic ’ he says , I know that because it was on the television last week , but I 've always heard it as ‘ Freedom ’ and I read that A S O'Neill positively breathed Freedom , as indeed do all the Irish , I find , and one has to have pots of money to go there , which gives one — what 's the word ? — sachet , which you do absolutely need to get into Society these days , and Felicity ( her name means Freedom , too , from the Latin , you know ) was frightfully keen to go , and does n't the name simply drip June in , say , the Cotswolds , and Felicity says there are teachers there with nothing to do at all , so you can tell the staff must be tip-top — I mean , what luxury ! spare staff ! — and Felicity 's always been such a tearaway and I know it 's jolly hard but I do think one needs Discipline to get one 's Freedom , I 've always had it , and Republics too , and now I gather she 's been on television , and Felicity was absolutely swearing by the school or something , Angela says , and where is it — somewhere pretty — she goes by train … |
22 | However , readers can take some comfort from the fact that for 18 months we have produced every word of a 16 page newsletter on a PC in WordPerfect , yet done all the page makeup on a Macintosh . |
23 | Where do all the wires go ? |
24 | Where do all the wires go ( 111 ) ? |
25 | Where do all the books submitted for prizes fetch up ? |
26 | ‘ Why do all the other flats take it so placidly for Heaven 's sake ? ’ |
27 | Why do all the hooligans seem to be on the row in front and the row behind me ? |
28 | Why do all the world 's bank depositors and borrowers not establish and use euro-markets in their own currencies ? |
29 | Why do all the court statements have " Criminal Justice Act 1967 sections 2 and 9 " printed on them ? " |
30 | Weak forms : ‘ DO ’ ( before consonants ) ‘ Why do they like it ? ’ ( before vowels ) ‘ Why do all the cars stop ? ’ |