Example sentences of "[pron] all the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Where committed facilities are in existence at the balance sheet date which permit the refinancing of debt for a period beyond its maturity , the earliest date at which the lender has the right to demand repayment should be taken to be the maturity date of the longest refinancing permitted by a facility in respect of which all the following conditions are met : |
2 | This is the final result toward which all the great socialist reformers have tended … |
3 | Some years ago a number of philosophers of science and some scientists had the vision of a unified science in which all the separate disciplines would be integrated within a set of all-embracing , mutually coherent theories . |
4 | At last , in 1943 , he broke through the psychological barrier by founding a consistent set of 4-dimensional " hypernumbers " in which all the usual laws of arithmetic hold with the exception of unc in general . |
5 | In 1861 Weierstrass proved ( essentially ) that the only finite dimensional extensions of the real numbers in which all the usual laws of arithmetic hold are the real numbers themselves and the complex numbers . |
6 | Neither is there any organisation to which all the major firms subscribe . |
7 | According to this version , the turn towards services — the shift in the balance of employment from manufacturing to services — is the direction in which all the major industrial economies are moving and in itself need not be seen as a problem . |
8 | The work of the NDO was directed by a Steering Group on which all the major Accounting professional bodies were represented as well as private and public sector employers and educationalists . |
9 | One point on which all the above theories agree , although they would put different degrees of explicit emphasis upon it , is that ‘ space is socially produced ’ . |
10 | Then someone suggests a new theory , in which all the awkward observations are explained in an elegant and natural manner . |
11 | Given the whole family of crustaceans , it was possible to imagine an ideal or typical crustacean of which all the existing forms were more or less close realizations . |
12 | It is a common enough linguistic trick — and one of which neurobiologists are themselves often guilty — to speak as if there were some sort of evolutionary scale or ladder of complexity , along which all the living forms found on earth today can be arrayed to form a series of ‘ more evolved ’ and ‘ less evolved ’ organisms . |
13 | The first of these is the bit-pattern index , in which all the alternative descriptors for each record are given values of 1 if the attribute is present and 0 if it is not . |
14 | In reality , the process of innovation is an integrated , interactive , iterative process in which all the various aspects — including R&D , insights into market needs and economic analysis — operate hand in hand . |
15 | This is the secret heart of Ulthuan , the nexus of the great spells of the ancient High Elf sorcerers to which all the magical power drawn into the vortex eventually flows . |
16 | A major problem in speech processing is determining the point at which all the relevant information has been applied and the answer found . |
17 | Jean Baker , the Bishop 's wife , describes the entertainment at the end of one of the annual diocesan clergy summer schools as including ‘ a sketch in which all the retired bishops were running the diocese from an underground cavern ’ . |
18 | After all , to most people Paris is still the centre , the sun around which all the other satellites revolve . ’ |
19 | ‘ In his profession he found a force stronger than the temperament he had inherited from his family ; instead of surrendering to his natural instincts he followed a clear , straight path , and did not slide into the wretched muddle in which all the other Rougons perished . ’ |
20 | Whatever , when he arrived at the Ring , Niki was pilloried in the sporting press for his opposition to a great track in which all the other champions had raced : if he was so craven-hearted , they said , he should n't be racing . |
21 | It is the focus which all the other information serves . |
22 | In the course of two centuries of wars and battles and scuffles , in which all the other islands were invaded and many were conquered , Barbados remained untouched . |
23 | They are published primarily for the sake of their inherent scholarly and cultural value ; for the sake of the great prestige attaching to them , of which more is said below ( 2.9 ) ; and because they are the foundation on which all the other English language reference books published by OUP are based , reference books which are all highly successful in commercial terms . |
24 | The twin city of proud Ankh and pestilent Morpork , of which all the other cities of time and space are , as it were , mere reflections , has stood many assaults in its long and crowded history and has always risen to flourish again . |
25 | The payment of rent , in terms of money or money 's worth , would seem to be the very crux of the relationship around which all the other secondary promises by tenant and landlord are built . |
26 | It contains the first detailed plans for the Himalayas , which all the big names in the business have been working on for years . |
27 | The arithmetic alone shows that this Government is only prone to defeat when there is an issue over which all the non-government parties intend to vote the same way ( ie including the Official and Democratic Unionists , plus the self-styled popular Unionist , Sir James Kilfedder ) and where that total is topped up by a dozen or so Tory malcontents . |
28 | There is , according to Quinn , no single moment ( or relatively short period ) in which all the different aspects of the company are considered together and then each part given precise goals for the foreseeable future according to some tight , analytical , holistic master plan . |
29 | Muller discovered another kind of mimicry , now called Mullerian mimicry , in which all the mimicking species are poisonous . |
30 | John Plamenatz announced enthusiastically that " the voice of the people is heard everlastingly " through the spokespersons of these organizations , and Robert Dahl believed in the 1950s that the United States possessed " a political system in which all the active and legitimate groups in the population can make themselves heard at some critical stage in the process of decision " . |