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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This meant that nearly all packs would contain more than the declared weight .
2 A letter from the NVA to chief constables in 1899 revealed that almost all police chiefs were in favour of a law prohibiting incest .
3 In other words , although a lot is said about " silent letters " , it 's more helpful to see that almost all words have " silent letters " in a sense , and that they are n't silent at all , but are attempts originally to symbolise regional or personal differences in pronunciation .
4 When one attempts to judge the solidity of a poet 's reputation on the basis of occasional references in published sources , it is well to note that not all references are of equal value .
5 It is important to realise that not all sentence ambiguity originates in lexical ambiguity ; furthermore , our tests for ambiguity are not , in general , capable of discriminating between lexical and non-lexical varieties .
6 It is important to note that not all value is ‘ new value ’ for the purpose of section 245 as the latter is confined to money , goods or services and excluded are , for example , intellectual property and rights under a contract .
7 It is significant of Joseph 's attitude that his legal code of 1787 declared that henceforth all offences were against the State and must therefore be prosecuted even if there were no individual victim willing to begin legal proceedings .
8 I think that it is true to say that almost all practitioners of quantum mechanics talk in a strongly realistic way about a world described by wavefunctions .
  Next page