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

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1 Check that all cables are firmly in their sockets and have not worked loose .
2 We have to grasp the opportunity , and we hope that all ASH Supporters will join us in persuading people of the case for a ban on advertising .
3 Lemon said that all salary arrears owed to government workers from the last three months of 1988 would be paid in the second half of 1990 .
4 In 1988 , I established the vision that all accidents on overhauls would be eliminated .
5 An extension has been proposed to the recommendation that all ships over 5000 tonnes keep 10 miles off certain parts of Shetland .
6 However , this should not be taken to imply that this approach does not have its critics or that all researchers working within the developmental paradigm are in agreement regarding the more detailed aspects of language development .
7 I hope today that all excitement is centred around the Felton goalmouth .
8 Public finance economists often stop at this point , leaving the impression that all taxation does is to introduce inefficiency .
9 The Conference 's working assumption was that all incursions from Lagos were to be resisted ; the reason invariably given was that only the Residents had enough knowledge and experience of the mysteries of Indirect Rule to be entrusted with its execution .
10 I recall a Tory councillor saying that all homosexuals should be exterminated ...
11 The overall result was that All Hallows were third , behind Marple Hall , whose local knowledge brought them in first and Queen Elizabeth GS , Wakefield .
12 4.1.2 It is understood and agreed that all IEATP grant payments relating to the Project will be made to the Lead Organization as principal .
13 But we also recognise that all families face extra costs in bringing up children .
14 I hated the growing fear my father ( and we ) shared during his illness , that he would mess the bed , and once suggested to him that all families should be required once a month to show each other the contents of their potties .
15 As Gittins has put it , ‘ The commonsense notion that all families in the past were much more solidaristic and stable institutions can not be borne out — death saw to that ’ ( Gittins , 1985 , p. 9 ) .
16 Most people also assume that their family experiences are normal and that all families resemble their own .
17 In other words , the cereal-packet image not only neglects the diversity of family forms at any one time , it also obscures the changes that all families go through .
18 To ensure through general redistributive tax and cash benefit policies that all families have sufficient resources to purchase these services if they wish .
19 Does my right hon. Friend agree that that huge increase in real income clearly demonstrates the overall success of Conservative policies and would not have come about without the tax cuts that all families have experienced ?
20 We believe that the children of all lone parents can best be helped by po policies which support their commitment to their family and their children and pathways out of poverty should be built which ensure that all families living in poverty have the chance to change their situation .
21 Please note that all ticket stubs and monies should be returned to Joan by 14th March 1982 .
22 In the basic Gaussian method just described , it has been tacitly assumed that all errors are equally likely .
23 The Times , 30 March 1992 , has thrown doubt on the proposition that all errors of law vitiate the decision .
24 If the theory which states that all errors of law are jurisdictional really does gain general acceptance then the distinction between law and fact will be vital .
25 The effect of the general adoption of the thesis that all errors of law are jurisdictional will therefore be crucially dependent upon which approach the courts adopt .
26 For example , the extensive theory of review holds that all errors of law are jurisdictional .
27 First , it might be argued that to adopt a rational basis/rightness approach would create more uncertainty than if we proceeded on the hypothesis that all errors of law are jurisdictional .
28 If the courts were to develop the idea that all errors of law are jurisdictional , defined the word law in a purely analytical way so that it embraced any , or almost any application of a statutory term and substituted judgment on the meaning of that term , then a prospective applicant would be clear that the courts would intervene using that standard .
29 This , in turn , means that all titles must sell internationally : ‘ To date have n't had one book that has n't gone into foreign editions . ’
30 It is important , however , to remember that all transactions in land since 1947 have taken place in the full knowledge that the 1947 development value was the most that anyone would hope to receive by way of compensation from the 300 million fund .
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