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

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1 It was a figure in a mask and a jacksuit with all this gear in pockets all over it , and she had a headset , and one for me , one like I would have had on if I had n't taken off in such a hurry , and she had jets , which no Gnat would have been seen dead with .
2 But it was ghastly , thousands of us jammed inside , with the injured moaning in pain all around .
3 On his return in mid-December all his colleagues had felt encouraged by the Prime Minister 's buoyancy ; he had conducted the last debates with all his old skill and command of the House .
4 This from one who has majored in sneaking out of bad acting in theatres all over the world .
5 But enough family likeness remains to make the chimpanzees ' tea-time a most popular attraction in zoos all over the world .
6 There 's even a class for mini dogs … they have to be under fifteen inches tall for this competition … but at least they only have to clear fifteen inch hurdles.Dog agility is this country 's fastest growing canine sport , and many of the eight hundred dogs at Malvern have taken part in events all over Britain.But this is the biggest ever :
7 So I mean , maybe they need a course in theory all the more for that reason , I do n't know , I think a lot of them would have real problems with it .
8 This was the pattern in wetlands all over the country until the Reformation .
9 Let us begin then with a brief review of what we know about the ego 's past in order all the better to be able to understand something about its present and future .
10 Needless to say , once the battle lines have been drawn in this way , there tends to be a deterioration in relationships all round .
11 In view of the disadvantage which being in care all too often represents , that may sometimes mean making a special effort to ensure the quality of education given to children in care .
12 I 'm up to speed with Huerter , of course , but is your planning application in Leicester all right ? ’
13 No one can deny that millions are made to suffer and die each year in laboratories all over the world .
14 He extends this argument from spoken forms on radio and film and television to the new vitality to be found in the use of English in countries all over the world .
15 My wife 's a company secretary for the company in question all right ?
16 The declining number of nurses in training leading to a reduced output of qualified staff , fewer 18-year-olds as a pool for recruitment , and a massive retention problem in London all contributed to a need for concerted action , he stressed .
17 ’ Killer Bombs ’ The sirns waled , The sirne ecoed through the streets as the planes ( zoomed ) across the sky Droaned there was a quick burst of ack Ack fire Then a whistling of Bombs all around Suddenly here was silence Then a rumble , Then a boom getting louder like a volcano The sky filled smoke and flames Black Bright orange leeping through the air across the sky in the middle of the noise a child 's crying Then the shouting of people trapped in the rubble House in flames all around The loud ringing of fire engines rushing to the fire More and more voices ( shouting ) for help screaming Body lieing all around .
18 The casualty list soon spread to other centres such as Clonin Castle and Millisle Farm in Northern Ireland , where travel restrictions made communication with central office in London all but impossible .
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