Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] [pers pn] [prep] all " in BNC.
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1 | like I imagined it at all . |
2 | When I came to Macmillan , it was with the greatest difficulty that I telephoned him at all . |
3 | I may say that despite my reputation of being trigger-happy where libel writs are concerned , I restrained him by all sorts of expedients . |
4 | I challenged him with all the dishonesty he had shown and all the damage he was doing to the paper . |
5 | I thanked him for all he had bought . |
6 | I followed them at all three , but if The Valley was a 100 miles away , I 'd still be back . ’ |
7 | But even then , before I knew her at all , I sensed that normality was not really Karen 's thing . |
8 | I 've got fire on , I left it on all dinner while I were outside . |
9 | Ward was due to take over the driving and at the end of it I slumped into the seat beside him in a happy daze which insulated me from all sense of reality . |
10 | As he approached his defeated enemy , he felt no sense of triumph , which surprised him after all the frustrating years of hunting him down . |
11 | That night he prayed devoutly that he might be upheld in the purity which he had so far , maintained , in spite of the temptations and evil example which encompassed him on all sides . |
12 | While the EC was debating its approach to the problems of Eastern Europe the president-elect of another distressed part of the world was nearing the end of a pre-inaugural tour which took him to all the major capitals . |
13 | His occasional outbursts of anger shocked those around him , but he felt an uncontrollable flame of fury whenever he saw a child being bullied or mistreated which blinded him to all else . |
14 | You forgave us our sins , you cleansed us from all unrighteousness . |
15 | While G.P. was the one who led us into all the serious things . |
16 | Without taking hold of me , she forced me to stand in one spot of my own will , while she whipped me on all sides . |
17 | You know , the one who got you into all this trouble . ’ |
18 | She phoned him at all hours of the day and night , ranting sometimes , crying others . |
19 | ‘ So you found her after all . |
20 | She was as fearless as the Wooldridge boys who involved her in all their mischief , but sometimes Anna would stand and stare , as if she was seeing things that others could n't see . |
21 | But later in the day , after the Christmas meal , alone in her room for an hour 's rest , she unpacked it with all its effects . |
22 | She blamed him for all this . |
23 | She shook off the treacherous thought ; Dana was her twin and she loved her with all her faults — goodness knew , she had enough of her own . |
24 | Leith yelled , and as fury which she just could not contain spiralled out of control , her right hand arced through the air , and even as she hit him with all her strength , she was still yelling , ‘ Since it seems to be taking so long to sink in , you can bank on it — whoever pays my mortgage , you 're far , far at the back of the queue ! ’ |
25 | They wasted no time in coming up with a replacement for another New Zealander , Murray Kidd , who guided them to All Ireland League honours in 1992 . |
26 | She knew it in all its moods , the formless expanse of a dark winter morning , the bright sparkle of summer , when the water , however dirty it might be really , seemed to have the freshness of faraway springs . |
27 | She saw him in all his beauty , grace and arrogance — physically the most nearly perfect human being she had ever seen . |
28 | Or whether you saw it at all . |
29 | Deeply suspicious of his motives , she treated him with all the most obvious display of distrust of which she was capable , but her efforts seemed to leave him cold , so she decided there was only one course left open to her . |
30 | The only sorrow for Marjory , of Lunedale Road , Darlington , is that her grandfather is no longer here to share in the good news for it was he who introduced her to all things historical . |