Example sentences of "and [adv] every [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He had become Denmark 's most popular footballer , outstripping the likes of Michael Laudrup , and suddenly every boy in Copenhagen wants to play in goal .
2 One duck usually raises the alarm ( a deep quack ) and suddenly every eye on the jetty snaps open to follow the man across the bridge until out of sight .
3 Only the length was a non-variable and so every style retained the same ‘ look ’ .
4 Obviously they could n't be ridden on a mountain , but magazine articles and newspaper features began treating them as a status symbol , and so every airhead on a salary of over £20,000 a year rushed out to buy one and take it up a mountain .
5 He was also one of the first County Advisers to persuade his authority that the impact of original works of art on children was very valuable , and so every year a sum was allotted to buy paintings , drawings , and even pieces of small sculpture , as well as lithographs and engravings , to be used in the schools themselves .
6 And so every year between Christmas Day and New Year 's Day , he takes over the kitchens at Hampton Court with his forty assistants and runs them .
7 The injunction was : Item ; That you and every parson , vicar or curate within this diocese shall for every churche kepe one boke or registere , wherein ye shall write the day and yere of every wedding , christenyng and burying made within yor parish for your tyme , and so every man succeeding you lykewise .
8 And so every generation has their own essential TOTP moment .
9 And so every night when they got home there was all kinds of people , I mean you know say miners and anybody as well , they all surrounded this house and when the police brought him in , of course they were booing and all this business you see .
10 Proposals for private motorised travel were , on the other hand , very different , for this mode was seen to be at the root of many of the traffic and environmental problems of the experimental areas and so every effort was to be made to curb the excesses of its use .
11 Bare granite peaks towered over the south all day and the pools and falls seemed to grow bigger and better every mile .
12 Its main commitment is to the north , and thus every winter the battalion trains in Norway in Arctic Warfare .
13 Extravagance grew as hope faded , and soon every offer or deal , in whatever currency , was fantastical .
14 Many fewer people leave school at 16 than did when the examinations were introduced ; and more every year are being encouraged to stay at school or to leave only to go to sixth-form college , college of further education , or wherever else they may receive education that will lead to a higher accreditation .
15 This is also quite impossible nearly all restaurant meals are very low in fibre content and nearly every dish varies in calorie content from restaurant to restaurant .
16 and nearly every day , nearly every speaker actually attacked Local Government in some way .
17 and nearly every day , nearly every speaker actually attacked Local Government in some way .
18 No one knows where HIV started , but we do know that it is spreading fast and nearly every country in the world has people with HIV or AIDS .
19 For the most part everybody likes a child , and nearly every child likes everybody — ’ At this point , Joey 's voice was heard to croon quietly .
20 The weather was bitterly cold , and because there was no heating in Dana 's little room he used to spend all day , and nearly every night , in my warm apartment .
21 Telephonists , receptionists , accounts people , recruiters and nearly every employee are part of the design , part of the totality .
22 He would invite me over for dinner quite often , and nearly every time they 'd have a fight .
23 But it seems to sort of get later and later every year , so there 's no big panic , I mean it 's still erm you know , a month and a half away or a month from the start of the season so erm you know , there 's plenty of time yet .
24 Standardisation is effected by being scrupulously methodical and adopting a standard route and pattern of inspection examining thoroughly and carefully every surface and every item in turn .
25 I recall some years ago that a young postgraduate student who was designing a schedule containing a lot of attitude questions had his schedule internally tested at this stage by a number of people and practically every question he had put was a double one .
26 Although this was an extreme case , it is by no means unique and practically every university teacher who has supervised an undergraduate dissertation will recognize the problem of trying to write a dissertation backwards ; that is to say , taking the data that have already been collected and then trying to find some hypothesis which they can be used to test .
27 After all , as he had said — and now every word of our conversation came back to me as clearly as if played back on a tape — a woman has a right to decide , on the basis of her own capacity to cope with the situation , whether she is justified in going on with it .
28 in n it really and now every pub , as I say every pub 's got it on tap .
29 Else told 'im not to be disgustin' , and now every night there 's a terrible row before they go to bed — our bedroom 's right underneath theirs — and Else says she wo n't sleep in the same bed with 'im until 'e washes 'imself . ’
30 And now every time I see an advert , or just anything , I expect things to explode . ’
  Next page