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

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1 This cave , also known as Diccan Pot , must be regarded as absolutely out of bounds for all but hardy and experienced cavers .
2 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 .
3 The report Educational Opportunities for All ( ILEA 1985 ) remarks upon the enthusiasm expressed by London teachers for this method of working and recommends that an evaluation of support teaching be carried out as a matter of urgency .
4 there are 12 designs for all around the home , and they offer an inexpensive way to make any room 's decorations unique .
5 Because students are usually taught four-part harmony , and there are four conventional voices ( soprano , alto , tenor , and bass ) , they tend always to write for the conventional four-part mixed choir , thus ignoring the existence of the most common voices of all ( mezzo soprano and baritone ) .
6 World championships in several sports are already lined up for the Arena , as well as national and local sports events to drawn sports fans from all over Britain .
7 She was buried at Cholsey where her grave has become a shrine for fans from all over the world .
8 horse racing fans from all over the country came to the Cotswolds yesterday for a rather special day …
9 horse racing fans from all over the country came to the Cotswolds yesterday for a rather special day …
10 The club is revving up a grand welcome for four-wheel fans from all over Britain .
11 There are very many sixth-century kouroi from all over the Greek world .
12 Candidates from all over the north east descended on this once quiet spa town , to be introduced to the delights of Sales .
13 He recalls in the book , that ‘ On Court 1 , one intrepid spectator … persuaded fellow spectators to play charades , while in the various Press rooms , another entirely different game was being played , as journalists from all over the world pondered how to fill acres of space available to record the most important events of the day ’ .
14 The opening ceremony at the Altes Museum in central Berlin was attended by journalists from all over Europe and excited Berliners .
15 Sugar was the first aircraft to undertake such a mercy flight , and over the next two or three weeks many other Lancasters made similar trips from all over Europe .
16 It now attracts international drivers from all over Europe and is worth points in the European Championship .
17 Here developed in the eleventh and twelfth centuries a centre for the arts which attracted artists and craftsmen from all over Italy .
18 Ecclesiastics from all over the Christian world trained in Ireland .
19 Dozens of hunt supporters from all over Gloucestershire turned out to lobby councillors before today 's meeting .
20 Top designers from all over the country were getting together to stage something that , it was already forecast , would be the money-raising event of the year .
21 It began life as a village feast and is now an agricultural and country sports show attracting entries from all over the North of England .
22 A community venture from Herefordshire has won fourth prize amongst entries from all over Europe in ‘ La Village que J'Aime ’ — and the people of the Marcle Ridge are thrilled .
23 The event , sponsored by the Cooperative Bank and organised by the town 's recreation department , attracts entries from all over the country , many of whom run in fancy dress for their favourite charities .
24 After he resigned the editorship of the JMS in 1878 , he concentrated on writing ( eleven books in all ) , medico-legal work , and a successful office practice in London .
25 Customs sources say that raves held just over the border are attracting hundreds of teenagers from all over Ulster — and drug dealers .
26 My guess is that he is a receiver of stolen cars from all over the country .
27 An exhibition and conference on fire-fighting involving companies and brigades from all over Austria was in full swing .
28 THANKS to the efforts of thousands of persistent and courageous newsmen from all over the world , the war in ex-Yugoslavia that started in June 1991 may already be the most closely reported and copiously documented conflict in history .
29 For example , Lawrence makes little use of pronouns , conjunctions , and auxiliaries ; and whereas the preposition of occurs twenty-nine times ( out of 397 words in all ) in the Conrad passage , it occurs only seven times ( out of 377 words ) in this one .
30 On page 18 we 've got Part Two of Paul Buttle 's exclusively designed circuit of the Lakes , while on page 51 there 's our new and improved Out and About section , with no fewer than 14 great walks from all over the country .
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