Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] [conj] [adv] all [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Can I say that really all details of these watch schemes should go to Paul , so he 's got some detail of them .
2 Ms Tyson has supported the Japanese-American semiconductor agreements , the last of which set a proposed share of part of the Japanese chip market of 20% ; she says that not all sectors should be treated to the ‘ market-share ’ approach , but that the administration reserves the right to use it where appropriate .
3 And she warned that not all viewers will take a shine to their taste for booze , cocaine and bed-hopping .
4 Therefore , we believe that virtually all patients being treated for suspected acute myocardial infarction should receive a full dose of aspirin as soon as possible .
5 They suggest that not all attempts to start up new newspapers should be funded .
6 They recognise that not all interests in society are organised into groups and in order to explain this state of affairs they see it as important to consider two phenomena that tend to be ignored by pluralists .
7 He and Tommaso had stumped and foraged , lit upon the occasional coin , too worn to be of value , the odd shard , or metallic fragments until with experience they learned that not all finds were booty .
8 He noted that virtually all houses were found to have standard amenities .
9 It shows that not all labourers ' cottages were flimsy hovels and that families in this group could aspire to reasonable comfort .
10 1.10 It appears that nearly all languages make at least one division in the words of their vocabulary , morphologically or syntactically , or in both ways , between those which commonly do instantiate and those which can not instantiate entities ; the former are traditionally called nouns , and there is a very high degree of intuitive agreement in cross-linguistic identification of nouns precisely because speakers of even widely different cultures are disposed to agree in what they regard as entities rather than properties .
11 It seems that virtually all students will be exempt .
12 It follows that nearly all contracts of sale and supply can be made by word of mouth , subject to the normal common law rules of contract formation .
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