Example sentences of "[adv] take [pers pn] all " in BNC.

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1 Better take them all back then .
2 Zen sat there unhappily taking it all in .
3 Boswell reveals another sliver of his biographical method by complaining of frustration that he can not take it all down .
4 Oh we Oh I suppose we were told about the war but being young and heedless we would not take it all in .
5 Even translation from morse into natural language does not take us all the way to consciousness ; for , in the absence of consciousness , language is merely variegated sound , rather than the rich varieties of meaning that are embodied in , for example , Shakespeare 's texts .
6 I only had about two inches of rectum left , and they said cancer was a possibility , so they just took it all out .
7 A human family would never return to such a scene of grisly death , but the owls just took it all calmly .
8 The inspiration began when he stepped on to the tee five minutes early , just taking it all in .
9 about moving , I chest some things , she wo n't be there , I 'm not taking it all up there .
10 We 've just taken them all out to wash them , that 's all !
11 Fucking take it all off if you like .
12 It ought to make you feel ashamed , Sebastian , to think half the time you do n't bother to make use of all the facilities that are offered to you — you just take it all for granted .
13 Yet Neil Kinnock nearly took them all the way .
14 I ca n't properly take it all in .
15 Flat fields interspersed by dykes gleaming in the June sunshine spread as far as the eye could see and skylarks hovered and trilled overhead , but Nails , cautiously taking it all in , was given no time for comment .
16 ‘ I ca n't take you all , ’ Patsy said .
17 ‘ I ca n't take it all in , ’ she told him and then let out a deep sigh and gave a small shrug of her shoulders .
18 and hope that they 're wrong cos you ca n't take it all in .
19 Do n't take it all in the same place .
20 Do n't take it all .
21 And then , coming through here take it all the way up take this garage down and bring the lawn across .
22 As he lived in the city , Mr Coary drove me up to the Noones ’ for my bag and then took me all the way back to O'Brien 's Hotel in Dublin , where I had stayed long before .
23 Morse fans obviosuly take it all very seriously , but what do the Police themselves make of it ?
24 It is almost impossible to form a coalition of interests to get something changed in a statutory instrument or an order , so if there is broad agreement that an instrument is a good idea , one must either take it all or have nothing to do with it .
25 That morning they parted under the trees , he never took her all the way to the gates , that would only have made things worse , that morning she looked the way she always looked , rings under her eyes and her whole body braced for the ordeal that lay ahead , how hard it was to leave her always , maybe that was why they always drew the parting out , sometimes it took minutes , just the saying goodbye , they backed away from each other , then stopped and called something out , then backed away again , they called out special words that they 'd made up , words to fill the distance between them , words for the things they could n't say , they backed away till he was under the trees or she was through the gates , whichever happened first , she looked the same way she always looked that morning , except for one thing , she had a clock tucked under her arm , the clock they 'd found together , the clock that did n't tick , the lonely clock .
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