Example sentences of "all [conj] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The questions which must be asked are : i Do specialist multi-agency dementia teams provide a model for the planning and provision of domiciliary day and respite care for all or for a proportion of the sufferers in a community ?
2 At Tesco we have now started to use foam packaging , such as meat trays , which has been produced either without CFCs at all or with a CFC which is far less damaging to the Ozone layer .
3 It was plain to her that her therapist was meticulous , thoughtful and highly trained — it was undeniable — but Scarlet increasingly found all that beside the point because her malaise had not significantly decreased with treatment , and worrying about the cost of it kept her awake at night .
4 Do n't give me all that about the ban from Europe , it is because of the way the game has gone in England that we are not the force we were in European competition .
5 ‘ I hope he 's not overdoing it , all that after a day 's work , ’ Terry said .
6 Did he really have all that in the kitchen or had she sent out for it ?
7 Scandal at Bedminster parish — but we read all that in the papers
8 Doris will account for all that in the script and he 'll fall into line the second he sees hard print .
9 Robert Owen is not to be understood at all except as a man of his time , of the French Political and the British Industrial Revolutions ; nor fully to be understood except as a man of the first stage of the Industrial Revolution .
10 On the other hand , if we ignore the ego and its functions in man and concentrate on his instincts as if they could totally account for his behaviour as they do in animals who lack an ego , we should fall into the alternative trap of failing to account for his culture at all except as the outcome of doubtful instinctual behaviour of an altruistic or civilized kind .
11 The first group of three do not keep newspapers or magazines in hard copy at all except for the specialist journals which are retained for one year .
12 She fluttered the strut all and above the windows like eyelashes and all three storeys brick style glowed with pride .
13 The bottom line is , however , that an amp with an effects loop which could n't be used properly before , not only handles one processor but can feed four with no trouble at all and with no signal corruption .
14 to work for education for all and for the opportunity of free expression and communication ;
15 The world of the Zoo seemed to move without any noise at all and around the Cages all was still but for the visitor Creggan had attacked , who swayed back and forth where he sat on the ground , others gathered around him .
16 They 're all cos of the heart trouble in the family , you know .
17 That were all , all cos of the war , see ?
18 If there is a particular liability that is causing concern which has been identified prior to contract but is not precisely quantifiable , it may be appropriate that it should not be covered by a warranty at all but by an indemnity or other specific provision .
19 On the other hand , I 've been as happy as a turkey in January , and all because of a story I spotted in a medical magazine , stating that regular lashings of oily fish cut sharply your chances of having a heart attack .
20 It 's all because of a computer error at the Cheltenham based University Central Council on Admissions .
21 A holiday , which was n't going to happen because a travel firm went bust , has now been saved … all because of a chance conversation in a car-park .
22 And that is how the Charge of the Light Brigade , the most celebrated and glorious calamity in British military history came about — all because of a failure in the effective use of grammar to make an appropriate connection with context .
23 All because of a brake that was
24 Discussion groups meet , theses are written and moral messages are read into each line of the scripts and all because of a Cheltenham wine merchant .
25 ‘ Every trophy is nice but perhaps this is our best of all because of the difficulties we 've had this summer . ’
26 All because of the policies of those who shouted the loudest last week .
27 Tell people that you are going to meet Linford Christie , and women go coy and men go bawdy , and it is all because of the shorts , the blatant visual précis of the image .
28 And if they get very famished and very desperate and enough of their mates come out to join them , then how can Sir Robert Peel and his Tories fail to listen when you tell him it 's all because of the Corn Laws ?
29 Any of the above forms of project management pose considerable strain on the project leader , perhaps the matrix form most of all because of the sophistication of the concept .
30 The meeting itself was more like a wake , for more and more athletes were finding out that they were not going to compete in Edinburgh after all because of the boycott that was being staged by the African , Caribbean and Asian countries .
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