Example sentences of "and [art] [noun sg] [verb] all " in BNC.

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1 Oh , they said how heroic he was and the headmaster said all the right things at the school memorial service .
2 yeah and the dye had all come off
3 Since adherents of this first school regard college as primarily an intellectual training ground , they stress the inherent educational value of such subjects as classical languages ( Greek and Latin ) , political philosophy or English literature , all of which encourage the development of sensitivity , subtle and flexible reasoning , intellectual ingenuity and the willingness to see all sides of an argument .
4 And the computer screens all screamed , ‘ IT 'S YOU ! ’
5 Both the society and the borrower receive all seven pages .
6 As might be expected , it is the possibility of this absolute otherness , and the ability to excise all violence in the relation with it , which Derrida questions in the first of his discussions of Levinas .
7 This was a time of ‘ rehabilitative optimism ’ : there was a widespread belief that criminology and other behavioural sciences would progressively discover the causes of crime and the way to cure all offenders of their criminality .
8 Still , worth the admission price for ‘ Stories For Boys ’ and the chance to see all those Bono hairstyles in full .
9 He 's hoping for emergency cash for building work and the chance to keep all his students at school .
10 When I first arrived here , shortly after Margaret Thatcher arrived in Downing Street , both the country and the firm spent all their time looking back to past glories .
11 We got nothing out of it , while the Mayor and the government pocketed all the profits .
12 On Aug. 11 the Supreme Soviet in emergency session had deprived him of the additional powers granted on April 30 [ see p. 38916 ] , and , in a resolution passed on Aug. 14 on extricating the country from crisis , censured him for " indecisive and at times incompetent policy " and demanded that he and the government take all measures to implement the July peace agreement [ for which see p. 39010 ] .
13 Taken at face value their evidence was a powerful counterweight to the tenuous defence of accident and the defence needed all the information it could get in order to decide how best to attack the Crown case .
14 More than 13,000 people turned up to watch , which is 10,000 more than the standard of play merited and the stadium had all the atmosphere of a crypt — a sad pass for a fixture which used to crackle with excitement and produce play of fire and skill .
15 The machine cost two pounds and the purchase took all the money from my Post Office Savings plus three shillings which Mum , Dad and the ever generous Aunt Gertrude produced .
16 There are three facets to assessment , the P-component , a personal record compiled by the student in consultation with a teacher , the G-component which is a detailed statement of what the student has achieved as defined by explicit criteria , and the E-component recording all external qualifications such as GCSE or graded music examinations .
17 THE stars turned out in force and the sun shone all day to ensure this year 's BNFL sponsored Pro/Celebrity Golf Classic at Walton Hall was a soaraway success .
18 But erm and it 's all here for us to see , if you have the eyes and the detective and the persistence and the research to pick all these little details out .
19 Beck , a physical fitness fanatic , believes he has the confidence and the form to go all the way in this championship .
20 ‘ Within that tension of the already given and the still to come all Christians have to live — including charismatic Christians .
21 According to William , the man and the woman took all their clothes off and climbed into the bath so the woman was sitting with her back to the man , and the man peed into the water .
22 Between the tournaments and all that smiling at the cameras , one wondered how they found the time and the energy to do all those things that the popular press said they did .
23 ( iii ) So far as article 5(1) itself is concerned , he submitted that it is clearly established by Court of Justice decisions that it reflects the close links created by the contract between the parties thereto , and the need to resolve all difficulties which may arise in connection with the contract in the same court in a country which has a close connection with the case , i.e. the court in the country where the obligation in question has to be performed .
24 Is there perhaps a more significant conflict , however , between a conscious determination to enjoy your work and the need to think all the time of team requirements and of the specific obligations these impose ?
25 It was the song that Crawford 's singing teacher had prepared him well for , and the star put all his emotion into it .
26 I was quite prepared to die without giving it too much thought , you understand — and suddenly I find I 've got up steam and I 've puff-puffed past the station labelled ‘ Death ’ and the track lies all before me , unsignposted . ’
27 It is far better for the buyer and the seller to avoid all these arguments by providing for an express period of time in which defects will be remedied .
28 As it does with anything that is widely liked and appreciated , this modern money-mad world has made the rose big business , and the plant obeys all the ups and downs of fashion , high pressure competition and selling — even racketeering — as do pop records , clothes and motor cars .
29 Miss Hardie as Reggie Kray 's hopeless little wife , so imprisoned by mindless subservience that her suicide is awesomely logical , is quite astonishing , and the camera spots all its subtleties .
30 And the flame fills all space .
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