Example sentences of "[prep] all [to-vb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 The next prerequisite with a switched-on organization is perhaps the most difficult of all to achieve in a British environment , and this is openness of communication .
2 The advantages were that local judges could be used , first of all to enquire on the pope 's behalf , but quite soon to decide the case as well .
3 Staines , it appeared , was not far from Chertsey , but it was a long and tedious journey , and meant travelling by omnibus first of all to get to the big station across the river in York Road .
4 You must also remember that whatever deal you do , it 's reflected for all to see on the Ticker page of the Topic system . ’
5 The plotting room was suddenly silent and the flag was flying at half mast for all to see on the garrison church at Moascar , Ismailia .
6 His tent of meeting , the focus of his presence and means of dialogue , is pitched outside the camp , a sign for all to see of the distance now established between him and his people .
7 ‘ I 've denounced facts which are there for all to see in the RAI accounts , and the public prosecutors are looking into some of them .
8 Subsidiarity was designed to operate under forms of government exercising undivided power , and the pretensions and ambitions to exercise this power are already clear for all to see in the plans for European integration .
9 He revels in the physical quality of the paint and that sheer primaeval force and energy is there for all to see in the late works .
10 The House does not have to take my word for it , because the action taken to deliver our commitments is there for all to see in the report .
11 Dupea did not want to be tied down by anything or anyone — which seemed Nicholson 's own philosophy — and he wanted above all to keep on the move .
12 I mean I had nothing at all to do with t' business except I went in partnership with me wife and that .
13 The neo-pagans say this is nonsense , their religion has nothing at all to do with the devil , because the devil is an invention of the Christians .
14 ‘ Very sick , and it 's got nothing at all to do with the sea . ’
15 It has nothing at all to do with the cure of Legion .
16 This had , and George Eliot knew it , little or even nothing to do with Christ 's injunctions to his followers , and certainly nothing at all to do with the Incarnation which was now being celebrated as the congregation sang " Unto us a Boy is Born " as Daniel at the white-draped altar , with its lovingly embroidered white cloth , watched with Mr Ellenby over the bread and wine .
17 Interesting facts culled from a meeting with the leading lights of both Aldus and Adobe at last year 's Appleworld show indicate that the main problem with PostScript on the Macintosh is the QuickDraw to PostScript conversion process and has nothing at all to do with the LaserWriter or PostScript .
18 They probably have n't anything at all to do with the case .
19 Because of one of the two mentioned here in this note has nothing at all to do with the environment .
20 When they were not in chapel , at the dinner table or in their beds , there was nothing at all to do in the house except join the endless gossiping sessions with which João 's sisters and cousins filled their idle hours .
21 But we are concerned with a fundamentally different matter , the possible ways in which some entity ( or property ) , already accepted mentally , might be identified by a speaker , either for the purposes of his own thought or for communicating some idea to an audience ; in the latter case , there is no reason at all to object to the suggestion that the same item might be referred to either by ( 7 ) , or by ( 4 ) or ( 5 ) .
22 Neither Marxism Today , Socialist Review nor Tribune had anything at all to say about the programme .
23 The Bible does have quite a bit to say about Christians — all Christians — being witnesses for Jesus , BUT it does not have very much at all to say about the sort of ‘ Witnessing ’ being done by ‘ Damnation Derek ’ .
24 As Kenny and Kenny suggest , the " position of the landlord is now very much strengthened " and the " question is whether licences have anything at all to offer to the landlord looking for an income from his residential property . "
25 Any intelligent man , once he has been given the opportunity to voice his feelings , will understand just what he has done and be able to see that it makes no sense at all to build upon an isolated failure when he has a lifetime of ‘ successes ’ about which he could think .
26 It does n't take them long at all to get in the outskirts of London , it 's weaving your way
27 Everything about him spelt self-assurance , the confidence of someone who had nothing at all to prove to the world .
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