Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] to all [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 This year 's Free Entry Day will take place on Wednesday 15 May when many National Trust and National Trust for Scotland properties will be offering free admission to all visitors .
2 This classified image could be displayed by assigning the colour blue to all pixels labelled ‘ W ’ , the colour dark green to all pixels labelled ‘ P ’ and the colour light green to all pixels labelled ‘ G ’ .
3 These are the kinds of issues which an analysis of curriculum balance needs to address , and the head will need to be clear that the heart of the matter is the question of the deployment of time in ways which allow adequate attention to all parts of a curriculum .
4 There should be free access to all courts within the jurisdiction and to legal services to make such access effective , including access to assistance which avoids the need to resort to litigation .
5 The security of IT systems is a matter of universal concern to all businesses which place any kind of reliance on IT for their continuing viability .
6 Of course , after you have been through the modes in one key , remember to transpose this information to all keys , not forgetting to learn the scale harmony ( I mn7 , II m7b5 , III maj7&sharp ; 5 , IV min7 , V Dominant7 , VI maj7 , VII Diminished7 ) .
7 In an effort to cut down on unnecessary distribution of papers , I do not propose to circulate this list to all members .
8 £75.00 incl VAT Gives free admittance to all films ( Apart from Opening , Mid-Festival and Closing films at the Odeon New Street ) and all events ( apart from Festival Awards Dinner Evening ) .
9 Dr Runcie 's vision of a primacy for the Bishop of Rome is that when the whole Church is almost agreed on something , the Pope is the man who can articulate this agreement to all Christians and non-Christians with the greatest authority .
10 There is a hidden subtle dimension to all creatures that makes them what they are , possessing the basic behavioural characteristics of their species .
11 The award is in recognition of the company 's in-house training programme , which is aimed at providing a warm and professional welcome to all visitors .
12 They recognised that cases of alleged child abuse put great stress on all concerned , and they offered pastoral support to all children , parents , police , lawyers , the medical profession , social workers and anxious onlookers .
13 The proper approach to development lies , no doubt , somewhere between a slavish attachment to all things foreign and an atavistic distaste for any type of change .
14 They saw in it a narrative paradigm which offered the possibility of meaning in their individual experience to all men .
15 This classified image could be displayed by assigning the colour blue to all pixels labelled ‘ W ’ , the colour dark green to all pixels labelled ‘ P ’ and the colour light green to all pixels labelled ‘ G ’ .
16 They insisted that these issues were of paramount importance to all women because they were fundamental to marriage and the family and to its valid extension in female charity work and social reform .
17 As well as these individual benefits and services to members , the union provides an additional service to all musicians by its presence and its activities .
18 The Bank of England extended formal and explicit supervision to all traders and brokers in the government bond market .
19 Already I am organising supplies of isolating varnish to all churches and register offices .
20 Anyway , please could you thank GEORGE most sincerely for his endeavours — the fact that everyone pulls their weight up there ensures the place runs at minimal cost to all users .
21 Two programs which are virtually guaranteed to work are Fontasy and Fleet Street Editor which is the same as Clickart Personal Publisher to all intents and purposes .
22 A wide approach is taken here to " defective goods " which covers design and production defects whilst " loss or damage " extends beyond death or personal injury to all types of injury .
23 In this , insurers have to pool good and bad risks and charge a standard premium to all subscribers .
24 But then to us they all had the same accent — they were just Yanks , chewing gum , blocking our paths wherever we went , aggravatingly sure of themselves and their instant appeal to all females who had n't actually got one foot in the grave .
25 Through his instruction he was partly responsible for the 1649 Act Concerning Religion which was the earliest legislation in the English-speaking world that explicitly guaranteed toleration to all Christians .
26 Mrs Greengross added : ‘ Is n't it about time that the Government exercised some seasonal goodwill to all men — and women — of pensionable age and increased the £10 Christmas bonus ? ’
27 The decision of the Post Office to set up the British Broadcasting Company in 1922 as a co-operative of radio set manufacturers was an attempt to overcome a series of essentially technical and organizational problems : the need to satisfy set manufacturers by ensuring that all participated in the birth and development of broadcasting , the need to avoid chaos on the airwaves on the American scale , and the need to guarantee an efficient and satisfactory service to all listeners .
28 The Thatcher fiscal revolution — redistributing income to those with most — must be reversed , but in such a way as to extend an incentive-based society to all taxpayers , and particularly those at the bottom of the income pile .
29 The police are obviously involved also in other activities which bring them into contact with employees and a good relationship with them in these other areas will often be beneficial to reaching a quick and satisfactory solution to all sides when violence does occur ’ .
30 By a notice of appeal dated 13 August 1991 the applicant appealed against that decision of the Divisional Court on the grounds , inter alia , that it had erred ( 1 ) in holding that there was no obligation on Lautro to give the applicant an opportunity to make representations prior to the issue of that notice ; ( 2 ) in asserting that there was a principle of law that a regulatory body should know with precision from whom they must invite representations ; ( 3 ) in perceiving any difficulty in identifying persons who should have been given advance notification , so as to be treated fairly , of any proposals by Lautro to issue a notice since such notification should at least be given to anyone who would be directly affected by such a notice and/or whose conduct was in issue ; ( 4 ) in regarding as apposite the remarks of Lord Diplock in Cheall v. Association of Professional Executive Clerical and Computer Staff [ 1983 ] 2 A.C. 180 , 190A since the non-application of the legal concept of natural justice to all persons effected by but not parties to a dispute was not and had never been in issue ; and ( 5 ) in failing to have regard to the absence of any rights of appeal according to the rules of Lautro in deciding whether the principle of natural justice applied .
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