Example sentences of "[be] all [art] difference " in BNC.
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1 | There could be all the difference in the world between 500 and about 500 , and it 's important to know the margins of tolerance a person is using in order to interpret them . |
2 | There is all the difference between keeping slim , well-groomed and well-dressed in order to look good at forty-five or fifty , and putting the same amount of effort into an attempt to put back the clock and have another crack at being twenty-five . |
3 | In the case of those groups which are less advanced today the process will take longer , but that is all the difference . ' |
4 | But there is all the difference in the world between people created as equal before God , having equal access to the law , and the way in which equality is used so frequently today : not as equality of opportunity but as equality of outcome . |
5 | ‘ There is all the difference in the world between withholding medical treatment that 's either painful or futile and deliberately withholding food . |
6 | There is all the difference in the world between encouraging people to feel good , and encouraging them to feel good about the situation . |
7 | There is all the difference between an incomplete answer labelled ‘ no time to finish ’ — when marks can be given only for what is written down — and a complete though condensed answer labelled ‘ in note form ’ — when the examiner may of his charity overlook defects of style , excessive abbreviation and lack of full detail . |
8 | There is all the difference in the world between a register and a list . |
9 | There is all the difference in the world between finding out who the single people are and having a statutory register as we have under the community charge . |
10 | There 's all the difference between live and being I Mean being time and being in God . |
11 | There was all the difference in the world between meeting a retired sporting hero behind the bar and meeting a shareholder or even a director . |
12 | For there was all the difference between the modest hillocks of comfort which the successful worker or ex-worker might reasonably hope to climb and the really impressive accumulations of wealth . |
13 | Later came the Farmans , aptly named ‘ cages à poules ’ , and the Caudrons , of which a French flyer remarked at the time that between these and the current German types ‘ there was all the difference between a lorry and a Rolls Royce ’ . |