Example sentences of "[verb] [noun] all " in BNC.

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1 The interior has painted surfaces all over ; especially interesting are those in the narthex .
2 It was a cry that was gathering support all over the country .
3 To strew blessings all over the world ;
4 The boy who has no dad , for instance , may paint dads all over the place ; the one with a new baby sister may leave her out altogether .
5 She went straight down to the kitchen in the basement where her mutterings turned into a clear expression of disgust at the mess , cooking vessels all over the place and nothing cleared up .
6 Since school , which was n't long ago , he 'd worked as a butcher , ‘ squeezed a heart in a sink and got blood all over - sickened me ’ , and latterly as a — guess it — hairdresser .
7 People spoke of the great times when he fought sea-battles all over the Sudreyar and further south , in England and Ireland and Wales , but he , Paul , had not been there and did n't remember them .
8 She made speeches all over Britain , wrote on a regular basis for the Vote ( the journal of the WFL ) and took part in demonstrations and deputations to government officials .
9 If you insist on using GOTO all over the place , you will end up confusing yourself and maybe confusing BBCBASIC(Z80) as well .
10 By announcing investigations all over Britain it had set up a series of confrontations with the public .
11 Oh look he 's spilt milk all over .
12 Well you know this next door neighbour of theirs that 's been driving cars all over the place ?
13 In Kendal prosperous merchants and clothiers had established a middle class , and the Kendal yards , with the merchant 's house , the workers ' cottages , and the spinning and weaving lofts all packed together under close supervision opened up new conditions .
14 Now a subsidiary of Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation , it has offices all over the world .
15 My company has offices all over the world — America , Europe , Africa .
16 Why d' you think he wants labels all over him ? ’
17 His body was brought over from New York by Mary Read and fifty Girls representing troupes all over the country met at Westminster Bridge Road and had the strange experience of travelling in the Necropolis Funeral train to Brookwood Cemetery .
18 Damn you , Kenneth Harris , thought Melissa , for making me doubt Barney all over again .
19 Follow That Camel was filmed in May , but Gerald Thomas still woke up in the morning to find snow all over their Fort Zuassantneuf set .
20 The firm now employs 14 solicitors and associates , who are completing 10 to 15 house purchases a day , and has clients all over the country and across the globe .
21 A Scottish engineer called Fleeming Jenkin pointed out that the fact ( as it was thought to be ) of blending inheritance all but ruled out natural selection as a plausible theory of evolution .
22 In their rejection of God , the people of Israel had tried to find help all over the place — in Egypt , in Assyria , by making themselves subject to foreign military strength .
23 He wants Perry all to himself .
24 They visited pubs all over the country , immersing themselves in pub culture — playing darts and drinking with the lads .
25 How often have you switched on your television set and found lines all over it ?
26 He is based in Paris and has salons all over Europe .
27 He also has scabs all over his nose and ear .
28 While the forge is always warm and inside is the loving , childlike Joe who has goodness all around him and this is particularly shown when he looks after Pip when he has a fever and the power of that scene .
29 No , I do n't get bored at all with it , er because snooker is not er like American pool , where you go out there with a stick and just knock balls all over the table ; snooker is snooker , and the name of snooker is to play this , you know , this game of chess on the green baize , and er that 's what , you see this is where Davis has been so good for so long , a ) he 's a supreme professional , he once apologised for only practising for two hours on Christmas Day rather than four , er and if you look at Davis ' score sheets and his matches , which I 've done over the years , you 'll see a lot of breaks of around sort of fifty five , sixty , sixty five , and then he stops , he plays the safety shot and says to his opponent ‘ okay , your turn ’ , plays the percentage game , the occasional knock in the very big ones , but that 's why he 's won so much , because he thinks it out so well , and knows the averages , knows the percentages and plays the game that way .
30 Nevertheless , in 1883 Andrew Mearns 's Bitter Cry of Outcast London described conditions all too similar to those that outraged Engels in the 1840s and Godwin in the 1850s .
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