Example sentences of "[Wh det] [is] all " in BNC.

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1 Of the greatest player of her day , Jane Austen wrote only that ‘ We were quite satisfied with Mr. Kean , ’ — which may not look so good splashed across the marquee but which is all many of the experts demand : as far as Miss Austen is concerned , he did n't get in the way of the drama .
2 It was tiny but a reminder that there are still poisonous snakes in the region — a fact which is all too easy to forget .
3 This mainly goes to show the error , which is all too common , of seeing causes where there are only correlations .
4 For , oh , how awful is the seizure of the invisible , last enemy , sitting in triumph over the body , which is all over which he can have power . ’
5 If US generic production seems more dynamic than that of the UK , it is because the economy is driven by difference as much as by repetition : while the one secures recognition of a welcome familiarity , the other differentiates this familiar object from all competitors and discovers the ‘ exploitation angles ’ which will make it different and completely unexpected within a genre and a medium which is all too familiar .
6 The old faded lettering on its façade advertises a business long-gone and a characterful history which is all too quickly being obliterated elsewhere in the area by redevelopment .
7 I treasure every sign of the Creator 's love which is all around us .
8 You do n't see luxurious leather-bound books in most homes , which is all the more reason you 'll be proud to see them in yours !
9 This explicit relating of theory to practice is a feature which is all too often missing in texts written about language teaching .
10 Their primary audiences may differ , as may some of their aims and , in consequence , their modes of analysis and communication , but quite a few of their findings and methods are the same , a fact which is all too often ignored , at least by ourselves — the consumers of our wares often make far less of a distinction .
11 Much post-modernist art has had a critical and contestatory function which is all too easily overlooked .
12 Yet no one , it seems , can discover what lies behind Graham 's complaint — a condition which is all the more curious because on the surface his skin , while rather pale , seems quite normal .
13 Under the infliction of their memories , and prompted by a self-examination which is all the more rigorous for coming so tardily , his artificial , public self collapses and the real man , the ordinary human being , emerges .
14 A directly evident proposition is one , in Chisholm 's terminology , which is either identical with or entailed by a true contingent proposition which is all but certain .
15 ‘ The film has a bite which is all too frequently missing in the cinema , ’ he wrote .
16 You are given drugs about half an hour beforehand then you 're wheeled into a big room which is all tiled .
17 And then there is recession , the evidence of which is all around .
18 ‘ Make sure what 's all right ?
19 What 's all right ? ’ asked Lydia .
20 What 's all right , he thinks .
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