Example sentences of "all [verb] [adv prt] the " in BNC.
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1 | They are all partly true and they all make up the totality of a man whom I think very few people — perhaps least of all Niki himself — really understand . |
2 | But it did not at all rule out the possibility of these laws being enunciated by an enlightened monarch . |
3 | There 's been advertising for years , not just since the fifties ; there was advertising in Victorian times ; newspapers and magazines , and pornography with drawings of women , and how men thought women should look , and the theatre and books all put out the same sorts of things — this is how a woman should be . |
4 | We taxied in close to the runway and were all pushed down the exit ladder to make a sprint for the terminal building ; no automatic concertinaed walkways here . |
5 | The end of the Worlds , you know how cold it was there , and we were all going down the finish tunnel you just , all of the blokes you just thought |
6 | All rushing down the hillside to obey the Samhailt . |
7 | We met with the head ski instructor first and he made us all ski down the slope individually so that he could put us into different groups . |
8 | The Imperial Palace , former residence of the Hapsburgs , St. Stephen 's Cathedral , the Vienna State Opera House , National Theatre and Parliament building all lie along the impressive Ringstrasse boulevard . |
9 | all open down the back and you had to walk out through a huge waiting room full of people . |
10 | When tenants were finally given a vote , they all turned down the idea . |
11 | King George IV , the British Museum , Sir Robert Peel and Lawrence 's patron Lord Dudley all turned down the offer of the collection . |
12 | All were approached , and all turned down the privilege of printing Britain 's first underground magazine . |
13 | Also , uncertainty on your part can lead to the risk of you surrendering all control over the session to the engineer , who will be more than happy to move into the producer 's chair . |
14 | ‘ Are you telling me that you relinquished all control over the project ? ’ |
15 | He is particularly interested in the way that words and sentences change their meaning according to the context in which they are said and heard , and in the ways in which we all fill in the unspoken background of what is said to us . |
16 | The machinery they use , their cars , their clothes , the tourists they encounter , the music they hear , all summon up the idea of a new , modern , ‘ front ’ region : one which can only be fully appreciated by actually moving and becoming part of it . |
17 | So we all walked down the corner there we all had our beds round there everything was laid out . |
18 | And er the trestles and the tables were all laid down the assembly hall and then we had a er er after the erm when you had your your meal , which consisted of sandwiches and cake , that was all . |
19 | One idea I developed with my daughter , and find is very popular with all children , is to sing the wrong words of a nursery rhyme and get them all to shout out the right ones . |
20 | We all prowl around the pool in a fabrication of isolation , none of us speaking . |
21 | We could all take up the role of publicity agent , advertising our own favourite recreation ! |
22 | If the countries of the EC all give up national power and pass it to the European level , are they all giving up the same thing ? |
23 | It took her no time at all to turn over the bed along by the rickety fence . |
24 | The feathers were all bristling up the backs of their heads , on the tiny muscular shins that protruded from the legs of their breeches . |
25 | Either he gets it right or we all go up the Swanee . ’ |
26 | Yeah I do it all the time all go down the dock . |
27 | They all end up the same way but you do it by different ways . |
28 | When all had come forward , I motioned with my head and we all marched out the right side of the auditorium through the drapes that hung along the wall . |
29 | In particular , the traditional , if untheorized , distinction between serious literature and ‘ rubbish ’ has broken down ; as Franco Fortini said , the occasional slummings of the aristocratic writer of the past have given way to a situation in which we all live off the ‘ guano ’ which our society produces day by day ( Cadioli and Peresson 1984 : 85 ) . |
30 | Nails jerked his head to indicate that Hoomey should come in , as Stalin was yelling from the back , ‘ Shut the bloody door or do you want us all blown up the chimney ? ’ |