Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [verb] that all " in BNC.

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1 In addition , although the deputy head was clearly exhausted by the enormity of the task he had set himself , he had found the experience sufficiently valuable to recommend that all teachers should extend their understanding of curriculum evaluation and develop skills in addition to the testing of pupil outcomes .
2 However , when a distortion can not be removed from one market it is not generally efficient to ensure that all other markets are distortion-free .
3 It would , however , be totally wrong to assume that all apparitions are angels on assignment .
4 ( A trifling proportion , perhaps — though students of the trivial are usually intrigued to learn that all the dissolved salts in the sea , were they to be dried out , would be enough to cover the entire land surface of the planet to a depth of 150 feet . )
5 I was even more pleased to find that all of them could see me almost immediately , and the one I chose inspected the car as soon as I arrived and had the quote dropped through my letterbox the next morning .
6 It would have been more accurate to say that all policemen and women ‘ should have ’ such a role , for unfortunately many do not ( see Trojanowicz and Pollard 1986 ) .
7 It 's as well to remember that all women 's orgasms differ and , what 's more , they differ on each occasion , too — in length , strength and quality .
8 Before we get carried away by this dazzling technology though , it is as well to recognise that all this automation will not produce good videos if the operator of the equipment is lacking in the knowledge of editing principles and in creative ability !
9 In fact , it is fairly safe to assume that all proper names started their denotative careers as descriptions of one sort or another , although in many cases the link with the original descriptive content subsequently became severed or obscured .
10 But when I did find out I was profoundly relieved to know that all these troubling fantasies which had been playing twice nightly in my head were , in fact , shared by others .
11 It was equally important to ensure that all would-be courtiers studied music , which in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries included ali the arts and muses .
12 It is equally important to ensure that all joints and connections between the wires , uprights , and anchorages are properly made and strong enough for the job ( see Figure 13 ) .
13 It will be increasingly important to ensure that all surveillance is comprehensive and very widely directed .
14 As soon as A's and B's deliveries have both been made , C's 15 cwt. become ascertained by exhaustion , since it is then possible to say that all the potatoes left on the lorry are destined for C. Now suppose that before the lorry is despatched , C sells his 15 cwt. to B and arranges with S that the lorry shall drop 40 cwt. to B in Bristol .
15 It is , for example , quite mistaken to believe that all farmers are hostile towards environmentalism .
16 For John , on his endless round of visits to cuttings and embankments , tunnels and bridges , it was sometimes hard to believe that all this buzz of well-organized industry could be brought to a halt by the movement of bits of paper in the far-off City .
17 Er partly because it 's completely impractical to suggest that all patients should have an expensive er video flow study .
18 It would be too simple to suggest that all this was brought about by one man .
19 Hourcade condemned it as un-French : ‘ our tradition calls for a subject and the originality of Cubism lies precisely in its rejection of the anecdote in order to rediscover the subject ’ ; and he repudiated the idea that all the painters of the Section d'Or had renounced natural appearances : ‘ … it is absolutely false to say that all these painters are turning their backs on nature and want only to produce pure painting . ’
20 Here again it is very important to ensure that all names titles are spelt correctly .
21 It is very important to ensure that all clients understand those documents you invite them to sign .
22 Is it too imaginative to suppose that all these consequences would follow an abolition of the power to dissolve ?
23 The Council is of course very keen to ensure that all coaches are well informed of what is available .
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