Example sentences of "[adv prt] every [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 Students in the having mode of existence will … write down every word in their looseleaf notebook so that later on , they can memorise their notes and thus pass an examination .
2 but the whole point is you can put down every detail in a letter for them to read , to put on file , ca n't you ?
3 Instead , the feel of Guy 's hands on her shoulders was ricocheting along every nerve-end in her body .
4 I pushed the bloody bitch into it after she had cursed me for not handing over every penny in my pockets !
5 Many mums find it helps to think through every eventuality in advance .
6 These go on every day in a Home — they wo n't be planned beforehand or written up on a board , they are the little things of everyday life :
7 Actually we were n't too happy with the back of the old barn , because although we 'd tried to plug up every hole in the stonework , it was still possible for a determined young owl to squeeze out here and there .
8 Even without your help I 'd find my family , ’ she said in a low tone , ‘ and it would n't matter if I had to look up every Corosini in the phone book and knock on a hundred doors . ’
9 It was a square plain room , painted pale green below the cream above , in gloss , which showed up every unevenness in the plaster .
10 All those big salt pebble things I have to fill up every week in the ?
11 Letters 32 to 49 of the RNI were all written on 1 March with the express purpose of pulling out every stop in favour of Otto with the crowned heads of Europe , and especially with the kings of England and of France .
12 If you were to take a pencil and cross out every verse in the New Testament which refers to the resurrection or to the idea that Jesus Christ is alive , you would not have much of the New Testament left .
13 ‘ And if he did n't do that , he 'd get one of his men to ring round every hotel in England .
14 The recipes and the suggested menus evoke the days of English parlourmaids handing round every course in silver-plated entrée dishes far too big for the food they contained , while the illustrations of table decorations devised by Mr Thomas Lowinsky depict such conversation stimulators as " two dead branches in an accumulator jar " , or " a spiral of chromium-plated steel pierced with holes through which the stems of flowers are passed " .
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