Example sentences of "that [prep] all [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Between 1985 and 1990 , however , the number of people aged over 85 supported in residential care by local authorities has declined at a slower rate than that for all people aged 65+ .
2 It must be remembered , however , that for all children the ultimate aim is still maximum competence in the conventional skills involved in writing .
3 For therapeutic and professional staff to reflect the cultural backgrounds of the children , and that for all children , including those with special needs , their day-care environment and activities to express a consciousness of the multicultural society in Islington .
4 First , I saw that she was chosen , and that for all time ‘ all generations will call [ her ] blessed ’ ( Luke 1.48 ) .
5 Instead of being as high or even higher than the overall rate of self-employment , the rate of self-employment amongst temporary workers is only half that for all workers .
6 Here he says that of all cases of hypertrophy of the external genitalia in women , physicians are most frequently consulted regarding the nymphae ( the inner labia ) and the clitoris , and that the causes of this condition , though not well understood , might be due to ‘ masturbation , excessive venery , or even the rubbing incident to a pruritis ’ .
7 Nevertheless , even if their cosmology , like that of all religions , was expressed in fantastic terms , the Siberian natives , like the ‘ primitive ’ peoples of any land , had a rational enough view of the world which surrounded them , in addition to a wealth of practical knowledge about the forest and its fauna , and about crafts and hunting techniques .
8 It must also be said of Poland that its society has been most resistant to Communist influence and , that of all East European countries , the gap between the state and its society has been greatest The LWP has not gone out of its way to act as the arbiter of events ; rather , it has had this role thrust upon it by Party factionalism and weakness .
9 In the years of heaviest recession ( measured in this case as 1977–81 ) , the rate of loss of jobs in foreign-owned establishments was on average lower than that of all UK privately-owned establishments .
10 Furthermore , the perception of such goodness requires a posture of submission on the part of the student of English : " His discipline , like that of all disciplines , will lie in a willing submission to a master or masterpiece . "
11 In August 1991 the Pentagon revealed that of all US servicemen killed in Desert Storm , one quarter had fallen as a result of friendly fire .
12 New perambulations were promised , but Edward reserved his coronation oath , the rights of his Crown , and his right and that of all others to challenge the perambulations .
13 So the world of every creature is different to that of all others , sometimes greatly , sometimes by not so very much .
14 One might even argue that if that elusive mantle of desirability had n't happened to fall on my shoulders on that of all evenings
15 It is note-worthy that of all Charles 's ministers the one who most forcibly asserted rights of this kind , Pedro Rodriquez Campomanes , was also the one least influenced by ‘ enlightened ’ ideas , which in Spain were very much a foreign , overwhelmingly French , import .
16 In 1700 only 7.5 per cent of industrial output other than woollens was exported and as late as 1831 only 7.7 per cent of output other than that of all textiles ( with cotton now well ahead of wool ) and of iron .
17 The skin of an otter , in common with that of all mammals , contains a substance known as L-serine , and fish are so acutely sensitive to this chemical that they can sense it diluted one thousand million times .
18 The important point to note is that with all discount securities the yield is always greater than the discount rate ; i.e. , from ( 4.10 ) , r > d .
19 As a cadet Eva had taken Colossians 1 verse 18 as her special verse : " That in all things Christ might have the pre-eminence . "
20 I say that in all affection .
21 History knows a cynical law : that in all lands politicians dislike ecclesiastics who interfere and therefore , when influencing who is to be a new bishop , prefer not to have bishops too practical and too effective ; and a respectable way of having ineffective bishops , the only respectable way , is to have otherworldly bishops , who live to God and spend much time in prayer and are not well informed on matters of this world .
22 Now you , you can do that in all sorts of ways .
23 I know that beyond all doubt . ’
24 Did they have to keep that on all day ?
25 Implicit in the new economics and in Kinsman 's work is the need to recover a sacred dimension and relate that to all aspects of our life .
26 The bad news , on which I expect you 'll agree with me , is that across all parties , the professional politicians have been letting us down for decades .
27 Oh , now doubt about that at all Peter yes , and with the sides equal on points , I 'm particularly disappointed for United who obviously would have liked to have climbed above Charlton in the table .
28 Erm and I 've said further on that erm some could have afford to stay out but that 's they we 're not all built the same and erm we must avoid that at all cost .
29 And that by all means , take them in in due course , but it 's when they can fit into the economic jigsaw that we 've actually created .
30 So you know I mean more than that by all means , you know , er so much the better , you know y the more the merrier but erm certainly you know kind of it 's a good idea to at least try and get that many erm
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