Example sentences of "for all " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Sport For All ’ has done little to overcome the inequalities present at the start of the campaign ’ , conclude the report 's authors .
2 Simon 's first book , Green Wellies For All ( Lion Publishing , £3.99 ) , is published on 28 March under the pseudonym Peter Hamilton .
3 The fitting of additional security locks top and bottom is essential for all round protection .
4 It was also vital to raise the nuclear threshold in Europe by increasing the level of conventional forces , and yet the British , for all too obvious financial reasons , were doing just the opposite !
5 This antiseptic treatment can be used for all but flowers .
6 INGOLSTADT was having a kind of festival , a Projectwoche , entitled Eine Welt für Alle ( One World for All ) .
7 At 1988/89 rates ( Home Office , 1990b , p. 110 ) , it cost on average £288 per week to keep an offender in custody , compared with £19 per week to supervise an offender on probation ; yet the Home Office acknowledge : ‘ It is hard to show any effect that one type of sentence is more likely than any other to reduce the likelihood of reoffending , which is high for all ’ ( p. 7 ) .
8 R. H. Tawney died in January 1962 , and admirers of the grammar school ( like myself ) reflected on the contrasts between Secondary Education for All ( 1922 ) and The future of Socialism ( 1957 ) , and on the deep , underlying tensions in the growing debate on secondary education .
9 This cave , also known as Diccan Pot , must be regarded as absolutely out of bounds for all but hardy and experienced cavers .
10 Unanimity is required for all important decisions , although in cases of disagreement the matter may be referred to the federal government for decision .
11 omnibus ( Lat. = ‘ for all ’ ) .
12 The explanation which Hall later gave for this was that although the War Department competition was dead , he was seeking official approval for the principle that , for all important government buildings in London , ‘ a competition , limited or otherwise , should take place , instead of the work being committed , as a matter of course to an officer of the establishment ’ .
13 Undaunted , the 1918 Education Act made provision for local authorities to begin to open such schools for all 14–16 year-olds not otherwise engaged in full-time secondary education .
14 It started about 500 feet above the ground and could have continued all the way up to the stratosphere , for all any one of us , peering hopefully upwards , could tell .
15 It drenched the prize , his skin : smooth belly and thighs , for all the more exciting .
16 For those who would like to try more advanced moves you can try the book Juggling for All ( David & Charles ) written by Charlie Holland and myself .
17 Ordinary dual-in-line ( d.i.l. ) sockets should be used for all i.c.s except for IC4 for which a ‘ Zero Insertion Force ’ ( SIF ) socket should be used .
18 The Thatcher ideal of home ownership for all has been abandoned , and ministers are searching for ways to boost the supply of private rented property .
19 The organisation for all but very small raids was now formulated , with Lord Mountbatten as Chief of Combined Operations ( CCO ) having adequate staff to prepare outline plans for raids .
20 The rope should never be allowed to run between the legs , for all too obvious reasons .
21 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 .
22 It is no accident that the title of the Swann Report on children from ethnic minorities was Education for All ( Committee of Inquiry , 1985 ) .
23 Both the Rampton Report , West Indian Children in Our Schools ( 1981 ) and the Swann Report , Education for All ( 1985 ) appeared to confirm earlier anxieties .
24 The ideal of providing an adequate and satisfying secondary education for all ( and not just for the few who were fortunate enough to be able to pass a selection test at 11 ) seemed close to realisation .
25 The links between politics and patronage can not have been beneficial to the efficiency of the customs service as a revenue-collecting agency , for all too often strong political interests could secure an important post for a man with little or no experience who was placed over the head of men far better qualified than himself , and presumably resentful of their own failure to secure advancement .
26 Mr Ott had served as general secretary of Brot für Alle ( Bread for All ) for 17 years , and was a long-standing friend of WACC .
27 In Cologne , acquisitions by museums are nearly non-existent because the total budget for all [ ten ] museums is only DM500,000 ( £178,500 ; $310,700 ) .
28 She therefore concluded that ‘ it may be necessary to make the State system a flat rate one and secure the necessary gradation by supplementary allowances from an occupational pool for all the higher grade occupations ’ ( Rathbone , 1949 , p. 236 ) .
29 Damp , cold , rot , decrepitude are as ‘ natural ’ in St Ann 's as is the smoky atmosphere : for all most people know , they have been sent by Providence and must be endured .
30 One important aspect of the health for all ( HFA ) approach is the reduction of inequalities arising from the concepts of age , class , ethnicity or gender or any combination of these dimensions .
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