Example sentences of "in all [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Me sister never showed 'er legs in all 'er life , nor me , neither .
2 Many of these have since been taken on by the wider society and are to be found in all its corners influencing even those who would now deny them any real significance and tend to look back on the decade as only times of silliness and self-indulgence .
3 Dance in all its aspects has proved capable of embracing the whole range of emotions and behaviour that emerge from a proper reading and understanding of the text .
4 Yet even mimed dance and danced mime need to be carefully structured if the story is to be told in all its aspects .
5 The style must disclose and be expressive of the moods , emotions and actions of the roles played even where few personal feelings are allowed to show , as in such ballets as Ashton 's Monotones where all that is needed is a calm , unhurried and seemingly endless weaving of the dance design in all its dimensions .
6 Yet the discipline of MacMillan 's design in all its variety , dimension and structure requires each dancer to understand and conform to technical discipline .
7 It is worth noting that such important modern choreographers as Kurt Jooss and Martha Graham and the leader of the Dance Theatre of Harlem , George Mitchell , insisted that their dancershave knowledge of some school of classical technique , to which they added other exercises to develop the flexibility of their dancers ' bodies , athletic qualities and an ability to explore more thoroughly the space around them in all its dimensions .
8 Rhapsodie The patterns fill the stage in all its dimensions whilst remaining within the more conventional patterns of older ballets .
9 The Bendcrete competition structure used at the British Open at Olympia last year had been set up in all its over-hanging glory next to the existing facilities .
10 And at the same time , since Svidrigailov too has been brushed against in this reaching back which is also a reaching forward , the incident of the governor 's ear can be understood in all its matchless comedy as a desperate man 's recourse against boredom .
11 Or rather it is proved — by sleight of hand ; for if the little scene is not momentous , how did it come to be framed , in all its sparsity , by so much white paper ?
12 Eliot seems to have ignored these suggestions because for him the physical and social landscape of London was no more than a screen on which to project a phantasmagoria that expressed his own personal disorders and desperations ( partly sexual , as one might expect , and as the drafts make clear ) ; whereas Pound seems to have supposed that the subject of the poem was London in all its historical and geographical actuality , much as the city of Dublin was from one point of view the subject of Joyce 's Ulysses .
13 There were two contenders for this : acid deposition ( in all its various forms ) and ozone .
14 If it did not exist , would anyone trouble to invent it at a time when , from the Atlantic to the Urals , socialism in all its manifestations is losing the argument to liberal capitalism ?
15 All this was to combat racism in all its manifestations .
16 This would lead to a decline in the volume of less essential traffic in urban and rural areas and bring an overall reduction in all its adverse effects , including its contribution , through carbon dioxide , to global warming — certain to be very high on the political agenda in the next few years .
17 The exotic folklore-ism towards which Colgrass 's piece had eventually groped its way was here unleashed in all its succulence and schmaltz .
18 First , Temple confronted the life of the real world in all its complexity .
19 We must accept that study has proved that the Bible is not historically true in all its parts ; we must declare that no Christian need suppose the book of Genesis to be an accurate physical account of the making of the world , nor mind if study proves contradictions in the different accounts in the gospels .
20 Those whose business is the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake recognise their fellows : there is a community between them which they acknowledge because their mutual cross-fertilisation depends upon the underlying unity of human inquisitiveness in all its manifestations .
21 In all its forms , its object is to raise man above himself and to make him lead a life superior to that which he would lead , if he followed only his own individual whims : beliefs express this life in representations ; rites organize it and regulate its working .
22 If society in all its aspects has always been in a state of flux , it is highly unlikely that this process will end at any particular time .
23 Leeds City Council has made great provisions for handicapped people in all its buildings and public places , and at Roundhay Park there are scented gardens for the blind .
24 ‘ The NFU is well known for representing farmers , and it 's necessary for the BHA to be easily understood as representing the hospitality industry in all its forms , ’ he said .
25 We are faced at the moment with the horrifying effects of pollution in all its cancerous forms .
26 Charles had longed to visit the Basilica in Rome , to see Venice in all its glory ; to walk across the Ponte Vecchio in Florence , virtually unchanged since the sixteenth century , and to visit the villages in the Tuscan hills , intact after hundreds of years .
27 It was now seventeen years since the Countryside in 1970 Conference , when he had talked about ‘ the horrifying effects of pollution in all its cancerous forms ’ .
28 In John 10 v. 10 Jesus says that He came so that ‘ you may have life , life in all its fullness ’ .
29 ‘ As Arab feminists of Muslim culture , we believe that fundamentalism in all its forms is dangerous and that the scarf is oppressive , ’ said spokeswoman Souad Benani .
30 Thorough in all its countless details his book is well written and easy to read , its charm further enhanced by many true to life sketches made in the field by John Busby .
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