Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] all [art] " in BNC.

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1 When somebody suggested , early in the LP era , that eventually all the old 78s we knew — and possibly many that we did n't — would one day be transferred to the new medium , he was answered by the shaking of heads .
2 From there on , the topography is less demanding , the road undulating gently all the way to Monmouth .
3 More fundamentally perhaps , people are asking themselves , ‘ Why did we all want English medium anyway ? ’ and there is a rather bitter feeling around that perhaps all the enthusiasm , all the euphoria about ‘ new methods ’ ought to have been preceded by a sober consideration of ‘ new objectives . ’
4 All the wood is this nearly all the wood is oak cos most medieval furniture is oak .
5 By 1985 nearly all the main broking firms and jobbers had linked up with financial institutions , both domestic and foreign .
6 I thought it was very interesting indeed all the information , and obviously I think one question is which schools are now going to be called in that were n't here before , and will that lead to a better distribution of collection points across the city ?
7 In one way or another almost all the world 's energy resources derive from the sun .
8 Well I went to work on the Saturday morning at six and we were dredging until half past twelve , then we would , then do repairs till five o'clock at night and then five o'clock at night , when the other crew had gone home , when I start to stay there then from five o'clock Saturday night till Monday morning six o'clock all the time just to keep watch on the dredger , I used to sleep mind you during part of the time and erm used to have a big old tortoise stove down the cabin and make good fire .
9 Using the bar codes to program the machine is quite easy once all the bits are drawn up .
10 The delivery date for new furniture and equipment needs to be arranged so that the new site is fully operational once all the equipment and goods have been transferred .
11 If they did not know the word less , their responses followed a pattern of chance responding ; if they did know it , they got it right nearly all the time .
12 He had been awake nearly all the night with an attack of hiccups — something he had never been prone to .
13 Yes , when it 's all quite all the shops are closed .
14 Buying 34 would cost SFr3.5 billion ( $1.4 billion ) , which could rise to SFr5 billion once all the gadgetry is counted .
15 In these least months of 1978 almost all the golden people of Iran and international wheeler-dealers who had fed off them and with them have vanished — westward .
16 Up to 1973 nearly all the fast growing services were of the type used by other industries .
17 This was the European Court 's view of the requirement of the West German Insurance Supervision Law to the effect that foreign insurance undertakings must set up an establishment in West Germany and ‘ keep available there all the commercial documents relating to that establishment ’ , for which separate accounts must be kept .
18 But funerals in any expensive way here with us , are now accounted but as a fruitlesse vanitie , insomuch that almost all the ceremoniall rites of obsequies heretofore used , are altogether laid aside : for we see daily that Noblemen , and Gentlemen of eminent ranke , office , and qualitie , are either silently buried in the night time , with a Torch , a two-penie Linke , and a Lanterne ; or parsimoniously interred in the day-time , by the helpe of some ignorant countrey-painter , without the attendance of any one of the Officers of Armes , whose chiefest support , and maintenance , hath ever depended upon the performance of such funerall rites , and exequies .
19 Murimuth remarks , significantly , that almost all the young knights of England came , together with all the young earls , Derby , Warwick , Northampton , Pembroke , Oxford and Suffolk .
20 Significantly is that almost all the new cases are confined to people in the high risk groups or those who 've knowingly had sexual contact with them .
21 And that again all the arrangements would be made
22 The foot-traveller shared the driving-board with Garvey , their elbows and heads pressed close together all the way into Horsey , and their voices murmuring .
23 By 1983 almost all the major areas of the Polytechnic were represented in the modular programme , and the number of students on the modular programme was by now greater than the total numbers of students in some colleges .
24 And it 's now , it 's continuous again all the way up to but not including plus four .
25 It increases their resting metabolic rate by about five percent engine is running about one twentieth faster all the time , so perhaps this is why it wears out quicker .
26 At seven o'clock all the guests assembled in an ante-room known as the Salle des fêtes , to await the arrival of the Imperial couple who were announced by the Grand Chamberlain .
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