Example sentences of "all [coord] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Whether planning a day trip , a weekend away from it all or a relaxing holiday , NOTTINGHAM and NOTTINGHAMSHIRE have something for everyone to enjoy .
2 In those studies where violence level or intensity of personal threat has been successfully manipulated , accuracy has been reduced for all or a major subset of witnesses ’ ( Deffenbacher 1991 , p.395 ) .
3 Mr Baker had said that industrial sponsors would pay ‘ all or a substantial part ’ of the capital costs .
4 In the consultative document , the DTI proposes two courses of action : monitoring registration of branches at Companies House to ensure that the law is not abused by companies being incorporated in a lax jurisdiction to take over a British business ; or requiring branch accounts from overseas companies which conduct all or a substantial part of their business in Great Britain .
5 When the whistle was finally blown on the crime by a disgruntled ex-employee , thousands of policy-holders and share-holders simply lost all or a substantial part of their savings or expected pensions , amounting to somewhere between two and three billion dollars .
6 Is that for for trapping it in or tuning it in at all or a different thing ?
7 Bukharin commented that ‘ the law of proportional labour expenditure or , for short the ‘ law of labour expenditure ’ is a necessary condition of social equilibrium in all and every socio-historical structure . ’
8 Amitha : There was a great feeling of solidarity between us all and a common suspicion as to why management had called the meeting .
9 He emphasises the need for recurrent education and presses for guaranteed incomes for all and a national superannuation fund .
10 JUSTICE for all and a fair sharing of resources were called for by Bishop Konstant when he welcomed candidates who will become Catholics at Easter .
11 Rapidly , she outlined her plan , stressing the ease of it all and the perfect opportunity it represented to right what she must surely agree was a manifest wrong .
12 This was the most sensational bit of news of all and the entire class jumped up out of their seats to have a really good look .
13 The will of all and the general will
14 The financial markets are perhaps the biggest gamble of all and the dividing line between " normal " risk-taking and compulsive gambling , sharp practice and even criminality can become exceedingly thin .
15 Love , warmth , the earth as mother of us all and the inevitable return to the womb are the themes he reiterates , albeit through the familiar , bloated imagery of fat parasites , suicide , blood and pain .
16 Love , warmth , the earth as mother of us all and the inevitable return to the womb are the themes he reiterates , albeit through the familiar , bloated imagery of fat parasites , suicide , blood and pain .
17 A void title on the other hand is no title at all and an innocent purchaser who buys from someone with a void title can derive no benefit from section 23 ( although , of course , he might acquire good title by virtue of some other exception to the ‘ nemo dat ’ principle ) .
18 Several cars , headlamps painted deep yellow or with brown paper covering all but a central strip of the light , started up and resumed their journey in the wake of the No 18 .
19 Shoreline dwellers : a king crab ( top left ) , not a crab at all but a prehistoric member of the spider family ; spider crabs ( top right ) and a crab-hunting reef egret .
20 Although all but a small part of the encircling wall has gone , the older part of the city , with its narrow winding streets which witnessed so much of Scotland 's history , is still clearly separate from the New Town , the two being surrounded by the Victorian and Edwardian developments .
21 Almost always it was underlain by a passionate feeling that genuine rights were being trodden underfoot , that the structure of custom and tradition by which all but a small minority of Europeans lived was being wantonly shaken , that any increase in government activity must threaten the subject .
22 Although Brixton has £180m of borrowings , all but a small proportion of this is borrowed at fixed rates so it does not suffer from higher interest rates .
23 But prevailing attitudes towards the Jews at this time among all but a small proportion of the population , discriminatory though they were in different degrees , did not remotely match the anti-Jewish paranoia of Hitler and the activist Jew-baiting elements within the Nazi Movement .
24 ‘ In the eyes of all but a small percentage of Irish people , the so-called armed struggle has degenerated into a campaign of sickening sectarian killing of fellow Irish men and women . ’
25 Shortly after the outbreak of World War II rent control was imposed on all but a small number of high-grade houses .
26 The analyses carried out are often arcane in detail to all but a small group of ‘ high priests ’ ;
27 Originally intended to have taken the form of a binding Convention , it was watered down to a " Statement " as a result of concerted lobbying by a number of timber-exporting countries , led by Malaysia , which viewed it as an attack on sovereignty , and accused northern countries of hypocrisy , given the fact that they had already destroyed all but a tiny fraction of their own virgin forests .
28 The rigours of the winter 1920–1 and the Kronstadt rebellion stripped away the exuberance and illusions about ‘ war communism ’ for all but a tiny minority within the Bolshevik Party .
29 Mr Howard said : ‘ All but a tiny minority of authorities have set affordable budgets and council taxes .
30 Over a long period then , the cost of elections was still more than the cost of the permanent organization , and this cost was so great as to rule out all but a tiny minority .
  Next page