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

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1 It might be fair to say that the paintings Picasso executed during the following eighteen or so months tend to look like all tribal art , an indication that he was ultimately interested and immersed in its spirit and its formal principles rather than in any of its individual manifestations .
2 I mean th the f the funds having dropped at all .
3 The mistrust which their recent sufferings had engendered against all Turks made it impossible for the Serbs to collaborate with the more reasonable spahis , who were themselves the victims of the janissaries , whose leaders were known as dayis .
4 When the crisis broke out in 1294 considerable arrears had accumulated on all these clerical levies : from the lay subsidies of 1275 and 1290 on their temporalities ; from the direct clerical subsidies of 1279–80 and 1290 ; and from papal tenths granted both in 1274 and especially in 1291 .
5 In other words , a trade off of sorts does exist after all : it is a trade off between the unemployment rate and the rate of change of the actual and expected rates of inflation .
6 But most cancers failed to respond at all to the largest doses which were tolerated by healthy tissues .
7 On the housing front , the gap between the number of owner-occupiers has increased in all regions over the last decade , averaging at 68pc .
8 What did your parents have to say about all this ?
9 In fact those two countries fail to feature at all .
10 Over the years brambles had spread in all directions and had wound round the barbed wire , so it would have taken an axe or some other sharp tool to have gained entry , one certainly could n't have reached the top of the stairway at all .
11 Potatoes had flown to all four comers of the kitchen .
12 To those who remain unpersuaded , there is this to say : that , in response to that recent survey , three-quarters of the directors questioned did after all consider that the pay settlements they had conceded were not too high .
13 It is within the knowledge of the House that Bills have gone through all their stages in one day .
14 You said earlier that other Bills have gone through all their stages in one day .
15 The best-known developments of this kind are the ‘ basic ecclesial communities ’ in Latin America , but comparable movements have appeared in all continents , varying according to social structure and tradition .
16 In the first of a two-part special , Robin Dewhurst reports on a variety of action-filled , special interest packages designed to cater for all conceivable tastes
17 The Director of Public Prosecutions has asked for all the relevant papers on the nine British soldiers killed by so-called friendly fire in the Gulf .
18 I am always told they you should have a trim every 4–6 weeks to get rid of all the split ends but it seems difficult to grow my hair when it 's constantly being cut .
19 As the Allies had discovered in all their abortive offensives , however wide the front might be there would always be a devilish machine gun on a flank that could hold up a whole division ; broaden the front to eliminate that machine gun , and inevitably there would be yet another on the new flank .
20 Every announcement , public statement or document as aforesaid made or published by it or on its behalf in the course of KPMG 's engagement hereunder will contain all particulars required to comply with all applicable statutory , legal and regulatory provisions ( other than particulars required by the rules and regulations of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales arising out of the involvement of any Indemnified Person in the Offer ) and all requirements of The Stock Exchange and of the City Code , all other information which might reasonably be considered material in the context thereof and all facts , expressions of opinion , expectations or intentions or other information reasonably required by KPMG ;
21 Most managers want to deal with all of an artist 's activities in the entertainment business throughout the world .
22 These principles apply to work with all older people .
23 The organisers have apologised to all those who had planned to attend the event .
24 Businesses have to look at all their costs during a recession , ’ says David Grayson , BITC 's managing director of operations .
25 In some ways it is surprising that smaller firms have survived at all , let alone increased their share of manufacturing employment .
26 Perhaps some things have improved after all .
27 The comparatively large sums involved conferred on all these agencies a substantial power of patronage over recipient institutions .
28 The argument outlined in Chapter 3 is that the long term interests of society are best served by a set of regulatory arrangements designed to deter at all levels the misuse of inside information .
29 Birth rates began to decline for all social groups as a consequence of changing attitudes towards economic conditions and opportunities .
30 Rates have fallen in all regions but the biggest drops have been in regions with the highest rates .
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