Example sentences of "[pers pn] [conj] [prep] all " in BNC.

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1 You know when I talk to friends they tell me that despite all my big race wins I have still been virtually ignored by the public who seem unaware most of the time that I am around .
2 I mean , schools the only thing I was , I 'd been governor of a a school for thirty years that was used to depress me with the fact that we could n't get for our schools the things that we needed because to me and to all the people in Harlow who have children are concerned that we are being stopped so much money on education which is the most vital thing in our children 's lives !
3 If he expected me to break into tears and confess , then he was a good judge of character , but I had Dod to think about and Dod had a missus and kids and anyway was bigger than me and after all was a pretty good drummer .
4 Many children and even staff have almost a phobia about school toilets and try to avoid using them if at all possible .
5 Their high degree of competitiveness is a lesson both for British companies that compete with them and for all those who are looking for ways to sharpen their competitive edge .
6 In the past thirty years , astrophysicists have discovered dust clouds , radio signals , X-rays , electric and magnetic fields in supposedly empty space , and it is now realised that there is as much energy/matter between the stars as there is contained in them and in all the planets as well .
7 Amanda , that 's a failure from you and from all of us .
8 I know you are over age ( over 21 , she means , he said ) but I worry about you because of all that happened ( she means me being an orphan , he said ) .
9 Finally , two companies , although they take several online services , expressed doubt about the usefulness of them because of all the difficulties and limitations listed above .
10 Steve and Paul were more in awe of him than me because of all his work with Roxy Music .
11 Her small , delicate monkey-features quivered into childish candour , reassuring him that for all her formidable composure she was , indeed , no more than twenty-three .
12 Er I 've never had any dwindling intellectual powers er simply because I 've never had any intellectual powers in the first place , so I would agree with him that in all cases I find dealing with er matters of a er er er er of , of legislation er en enormously complex .
13 We can re-assure her that like all the very best political art , hers worked more powerfully in this environment .
14 if you love him Be proud of him 'Cause after all he 's
15 She put up her hands in a gesture reminiscent of the one which she had made in the attic , when she had been still fearful of him and of all men , but the gesture was as much for Havvie as for him .
16 It came so fast the keeper hardly saw it so for him and for all Hereford fans here it is in slow motion
17 We are grateful to him and to all the other people who serve on the advisory board of the know-how fund .
18 ‘ Thanks be to God , ’ was all that Julia said , but Anne knew how much the news meant to her and to all the family .
19 He can never see anything in front of him because of all the smoke he belches out from his nose and mouth , but that does n't bother him .
20 ‘ But you did say the Gruncher ca n't see in front of him because of all the clouds of smoke he blows , ’ Little Billy said .
21 ‘ So you have to keep at him because like all kids he lives for the telly and various electronic gadgets and he 'd be quite happy eating crisps and playing for the rest of his life .
22 It is a conception that might not be true of it , or all of it , and which might cease to be true of it or of all of it .
23 Or is it that inside all organizations there are , continuously , small discoveries to be made in order to improve what is being done — and that schools do not differ from other organizations ?
24 Moral : never start a big warren system other than at the beginning of the day 's work , since you need to complete it if at all possible rather than have to extend the work into another day .
25 If Washoe has an unfulfilled desire , one can rest assured that the eager and attentive experimenters will gather from context what it is and fulfil it if at all possible .
26 ( Experience had shown , as the introduction pointed out , that whenever a letter notation was used , people tended to pronounce it if at all possible . )
27 'Twill be well because he is not the real thing , never could be , and is not even now presuming to be ; but conversely , 'twill be well because the imitation , the travesty , of the real thing can also usurp it and to all intents and purposes become it .
28 As Mrs Robson said , people had taken to war like they did to life : they had accepted it and were living with it and with all the things it did to them ; but why did them up top have to go and stop the flower trains coming from Cornwall ?
29 I ca n't obviously give my Noble Friend an assurance that this will be done , but in due course er I would very much hope that it would be and when it is my Noble Friend will then be able to refer to that Act with total simplicity and find his way through it and with all the original Acts amended as they were and will be after this Act has been passed .
30 For example , the West Glamorgan consumer protection department deals with the problems of the local small shopkeepers and the Office of Fair Trading collates information from it and from all the other consumer departments so that it can identify whether there is a general abuse that needs remedial action .
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