Example sentences of "all took [art] " in BNC.

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1 They all took a break then , to eat their oatcakes and drink jugs of beer from Anderson 's .
2 It all took a lot of investigation , finding paint traces on plaster plugs in the timbers , for example , although some rooms had kept quite clear evidence of both colour and pattern .
3 The survey schools which have , for a variety of reasons , decided to operate a formula-based approach all took a number of points into consideration when devising their own particular scheme .
4 ( Bill ) Brakspear , Dr. Alan Hartley , Micky Watson and Jim Daw — all took a great pride and interest in this section , feeling honoured to be involved .
5 It all took a lot of hot water and big pans .
6 We all took a large piece of the treasure , and some used it sensibly , and some did not .
7 So we all took a bath in the same tub and went to bed
8 Then we all took a convoy of rickshaws to Lajpath Nagar , in south Delhi .
9 The last group all took the certificate , and there was 100% pass rate .
10 But we also , I think , all took the view , because that was what all the signs were showing at the time , that the crunch would come later than it did , and I think that was the perceived view of anybody working in Whitehall at that stage .
11 This therefore ruled out some forecasts such as that of the London Business School , and it might explain why all took the Henley publications .
12 We all took the short bus-ride to my Pop 's house .
13 Now if she 'd had the voice of the little dumpy one they all took the mickey out of , Lemon , as they called her , he just might have put the question to her .
14 The United Kingdom , Belgium and Greece all took the view that Community law did not limit the competence of each state under public international law to define as it thought fit the conditions upon which it granted to a vessel the right to fly its flag .
15 His general thesis was that the decisions from 1884 to 1945 , which held that the child when born can not recover damages for pre-natal injury , represent the pure doctrine of the common law , while all the decisions from 1946 onwards , which all took the opposite view , are to be rejected as heretical and wrong .
16 The members of the court ( Lord Denning M.R. , Shaw and Brightman L.JJ. ) all took the view that the Criminal Justice Act 1967 and the Local Review Committee Rules 1967 ( S.I .
17 In reaching that last conclusion , however , the members of the court differed in their own reasoning , though all took the view that the interest of society as a whole , public policy , outweighed the prisoner 's interest in being given reasons .
18 So you all took the initiative to ask questions as you go along without necessarily being invited to .
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