Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] all [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Surely it is treacherous to blame the palaces of the rich for all the blood spilt on battlefields ? |
2 | Here I come , the great man himself , the master of the house , the wage-earner , the one who makes it possible for all the rest of you to live so well ! |
3 | These negative forces are all around us , presently very tangible and running rampant for all the world to see as our planet appears to enter its grand finale . |
4 | I 'm sorry for all the nonsense , I 'm appallingly ashamed . ’ |
5 | ‘ Dana is very sorry for all the trouble she has caused and wants me to forgive her . ’ |
6 | Will still laughed at people in his plays , but he also felt sorry for them — sorry for all the world , good and bad , rich and poor , young and old . |
7 | I know they are all going to get a great deal out of this experience , I am deeply grateful for all the help that is being given them , they have had such a worrying time , I do not think one of them could have had a holiday this year without help , but I have faith to think it will be a good investment for the WEA . |
8 | Scotland has had its full share of the ‘ cake ’ and I would imagine that the National Trust for Scotland is grateful for all the help it has received . |
9 | Another reason to be grateful for all the publicity and discussion about child abuse is that former victims are seeking treatment at a far earlier age than was previously the case and therefore are able to go on and live a normal life once that treatment is complete . |
10 | This is good news indeed and the students and families concerned are most grateful for all the support which helped bring about such a satisfactory outcome . |
11 | Conscious that she must make the most of these last weeks , and grateful for all the happiness and love which she had enjoyed in childhood , she was nevertheless eager for the days to pass and for the news to come that João had arrived from Lisbon to collect his bride . |
12 | ‘ I hope you 're grateful for all the trouble I 've just gone to , ’ he said . |
13 | Their names were Donald , Ian and Hugo , and they told us that they were extremely grateful for all the food but that the last thing they wanted was to put us in any danger : they begged us not to come again because there would almost certainly be someone in the village who would denounce us to the Germans or the Fascists . |
14 | Wet through all the time ! |
15 | You are light for all the world . |
16 | To end your pre-shoot planning session , pick one or two camera positions which will keep you clear of all the coming and going . |
17 | He was black enough to melt into the shadows … too risky with all the fetching of beer and port . |
18 | I think the most important thing is to try and find that gap in the market that is not well trodden by a lot of other people — to find something which you can do which is different from all the rest of them . |
19 | But the tenth commandment is different from all the rest . |
20 | But these passages of Diodorus are different from all the rest of Diodorus : the style has a new vitality , the portraits conjure up strange and irrepressible personalities , the political and moral judgements are far more personal than in the previous books . |
21 | She watched every video you ever made , trying to analyse just what it was that made you so special , so different from all the rest . ’ |
22 | Juliet , it 's different from all the family . |
23 | It 's clear from all the hospital closures that she has relinquished her responsibility towards us . |
24 | ‘ I 'm not interested in all the tittle-tattle that has been flying about . ’ |
25 | The junior church , who had been instrumental in all the Christmas activities , were now looking for teachers . |
26 | However , increasing use of the structural Funds and institutional arrangements to aid the market process may be more likely to be acceptable to all the member states , as the success of Germany and Japan ( who practise considerable intervention in their economies ) , has indicated the benefits of using such policies . |
27 | Briefly , the rules of normalisation require that all entries in the entity must be completed ( first normal form ) , all attributes of the entity must be dependent on all the key ( second normal form ) , and all non-key attributes must be independent of one another ( third normal form ) . |
28 | This is achieved if the relations are in first normal form and all non-key attributes are fully functionally dependent on all the key . |
29 | Although this relation is in TNF because the ‘ lecturer ’ is dependent on all the key ( both ‘ student ’ and ‘ module ’ determine the lecturer ) , it is not in BCNF because the attribute ‘ lecturer ’ is a determinant but is not a candidate key . |
30 | ‘ I am sure Lennie was quite embarrassed by all the speculation linking him with Spurs , ’ Henderson said . |