Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] all [pron] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 This was the moment Lynch had been building for all his life .
2 Combining elements from his childhood reading with his reading about recent political thought and events , Eliot shows the man-child who has not evolved a cry , and so for whom ‘ the lost word is lost ’ , as trapped in a corner , paralysed for all his magnificence and that of his City .
3 To go through all her husband 's personal belongings sent back from the hospital where he died .
4 rose to thank for all his work for the fellows .
5 Is that the general , I mean I do n't know for all you car drivers have any thing to say about public transport , maybe you do n't know any more but those of you who use it , I mean is hopeless the general view ? , yes
6 He enjoys it all with equal enthusiasm , and when I visited him in a small hut on Denham airfield where he was instructing ab initio pilots in Cessna 172s I detected the same dedication , pride and affection he has for all his aviation exploits .
7 My flight path ended on a small ledge , my hands still grasping Olympus camera which I had been cradling for all my worth , regardless of the blows striking my body from every angle .
8 The conference : ‘ A place for all our children'
9 And he still looks after all his race entry forms .
10 There is a difficulty , however , if the seller is disposing of only part of his holding represented by a certificate or if he is disposing of all his holding but to several buyers .
11 And all those who had silently wished with all their might that they might dare challenge the hegemony of dowdiness took to ‘ Next ’ like ducks to water .
12 She was praying with all her heart that he would n't be too hurt .
13 By a miracle I found I could do it : standing upright on the pedals and pedalling with all my might I reached the road , where Nora was waiting for me .
14 The storm erupted with all its force into the reception area in a whirling , roaring maelstrom of disintegrating glass shards and a wild , bellowing fury of nightmarish , mutated flesh and flailing claws .
15 Trent shouted with all his force that he was going about .
16 How was such malignant hatred brought to birth , when he had meant nothing but good , and tried with all his soul to work no evil against them ?
17 This fresh eyesore bears the ( in Scotland ) heraldically incorrect EIIR cipher , which caused so much aggravation when it first made its appearance in this country in the 1950s , and which , to the credit of the postal authorities , has since been omitted from all their vehicle livery , stationery , and other graphics .
18 In the short texts which make up L'Usage de la parole ( 1980 ) , the traumatic reactions to particular words and phrases are once again dramatized in all their intensity .
19 Jung seemed to have lost the emphasis on the body , and especially on the sexual instincts , which Freud retained in all his work .
20 The reek of ordure voided from all his clothing .
21 Golfers often state that they can not concentrate on all their swing ideas at the same time .
22 Sometimes he glows with great power , which rushes out and solves and clears everything : a power lent by the tutelary maker who presides over all his sleep .
23 The only thing wrong was he was washing them with a hundred octane gasoline , he had a gasoline engine firing exhaust underneath it and he was parked among all our gas trucks .
24 This was held not to create a public right to be enjoyed by all Her Majesty 's citizens .
25 You 're being totally stripped of all your honour your credibility can you see that contrast that Mark is introducing us to .
26 During that week I felt the Lord speak to me and I knew that this is what I 'd been looking for all my life and I decided to follow Jesus .
27 No he said , I ca n't give it back to you , you 're the person that I 've been looking for all my life .
28 And when you were in suitably softened mood I was going to tell you how this time I 'd found what I 'd really been looking for all my life . ’
29 ‘ I ca n't always be looking after all your property . ’
30 Certainly the sequence is the most elaborately and intricately shaped of all his poetry .
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