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

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1 So all lines of enquiry in regard to body stance are amenable to alternative explanations , perhaps because the issue is looked at from the wrong perspective .
2 ( Totally homogenous capital and labour markets ; constant returns to scale over all ranges of output ; marginal productivity pricing for all factors ; continuously variable relationships between factors over time ; land as an insignificant input . )
3 Nothing is easier than to obey a master who is perhaps exacting , but who rules over all details of life , assures one 's daily bread , and makes it possible to banish all concern from the mind .
4 But it does mean that cross-addiction is a factor that may possibly be of some influence in all of this and that it is a factor that may need to be taken into consideration in the long term in attempting to improve the over all quality of recovery .
5 By the middle of the eighteenth century the Parliament of England first and then Great Britain had established de facto control over all aspects of government .
6 When questions such as these are asked , it becomes apparent that not all conflicts of interest are of equal importance or concern .
7 Moreover there can be no existents that can not be objects of thought , although , clearly , not all objects of thought qualify as potential existents .
8 In the first place , the adjectives with which we are concerned are certainly not all adjectives of time .
9 Not all acts of sabotage ‘ mutilate or destroy ’ the work environment ; some merely cause delays and confusion .
10 Is that not all part of literacy ?
11 Not all cases of child cruelty have similar implications to those which Kempe and his associates have discovered .
12 Of course , not all cases of vehicle taking are so serious : our whole approach to sentencing — brought to fruition in last Session 's Criminal Justice Act — is to have a range of custodial and exacting community penalties graduated to fit the seriousness of the offence .
13 Yet not all instances of theory replacement are quite so straightforward , for some have rumbled on for decades .
14 However , not all change of state verbs can be expected to occur with adverbal adjectives even then ; for instance , murder and burn do indeed produce a change of state that can be described by an adjective but one which is so intimately linked to the nature of the verb and so banally obvious that the adjective describing the object is otiose .
15 But not all topics of discourse , of course , are legitimate candidates for ontological existents .
16 But not all species of dolphin possess such accurate sonar and , indeed , when the water is clear , even the Bottle-nosed dolphin will readily search for fish using only its eyes to guide it .
17 It goes without saying , however , that not all works of art made since the beginning of this century will be available for export ; a list of unexportable items will be drawn up .
18 It must be noted , however , that although the work-force was ageing overall , not all sectors of industry were equally affected .
19 Not all reporting of rape is of sensational cross-examination .
20 For the same reason , it can be misleading , because not all centres of population which possessed recognizably urban characteristics , as for example the employment of the inhabitants in manufacturing or trade rather than in agriculture , were boroughs in the strict legal sense .
21 However , it is clear that not all aspects of deixis can be treated truth-conditionally , as we shall see below , and there are considerable problems even for the apparently tractable cases .
22 Not all places of work are controlled by this Act , it only applies , as its name suggests , to ‘ factories ’ .
23 Not all types of tree provide a good pattern of tree rings , however .
24 Not all schools of nursing are so well equipped or staffed as to afford a media officer , and responsibility for the care and maintenance of equipment is delegated to teaching staff .
25 He argues that although there is no such thing as production ‘ in general ’ since , in Marx 's words , ‘ When we talk of production we always mean production of individuals living in society , ’ nevertheless all forms of production have some things in common .
26 Though the Japanese are by no means a lazy or an idle race , and though they possess none of that apathetic indolence common to those Eastern races who dwell beneath a tropical sun , still all notions of speed , haste or flurry are utterly foreign to their nature .
27 By concentrating on the signifying structures of literature , the structuralist approach sets aside all questions of content .
28 He brushed aside all arguments of law , and concentrated on what was to him the central issue .
29 In that most cultivated of species , cultural changes proceed at an exceptionally high rate , and affect nearly all components of behaviour .
30 It follows that nearly all contracts of sale and supply can be made by word of mouth , subject to the normal common law rules of contract formation .
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