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

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1 The observed pattern , that in all directions the redshift of a galaxy is proportional to its distance from us , can be explained ( if we are not at a special place in the Universe ) only by a uniform universal expansion .
2 In all instances the toxicity was easily reversed by reducing the cyclosporin dose .
3 In all sections the increase in exposure time was associated with a stronger autoradiographic signal but , at the same time , with a higher backgroun staining .
4 At all speeds and in all axes the little red wonder is extremely responsive and agile .
5 In all countries the poor are more national than the rich , but the English working class are outstanding in their abhorrence of foreign habits … .
6 So moral purity became a metaphor for a stable society : ‘ In all countries the purity of the family must be the surest strength of a nation ; and virtue from above is mighty in its power over the homes below . ’
7 In all experiments the bath solution ( temperature 20–22°C ) initially contained ( mM ) : K + , 145 ; Cl - , 149 : Ca 2 + , 1.2 ; Mg 2 + , 1.2 ; glucose 10 ; and HEPES 10 , titrated to pH 7.4 with KOH ( high K + solution ) , and the pipette contained the NaCl solution ( see above ) .
8 In all circumstances the beneficiary now had an action in rem in addition to his original protection in personam , and it could be enforced against any possessor .
9 In all circumstances the proceedings will remain confidential .
10 In Attorney General v Guardian Newspapers Ltd ( No 2 ) [ 1988 ] 2 WLR 805 at p873 , Lord Donaldson MR stated that at first instance Scott J had come to the conclusion that the duty to maintain confidentiality was not necessarily in all circumstances the same in relation to third parties who became possessed of confidential information as it was in relation to the primary confident .
11 In place of the nineteenth-century sense of a succession of literary historical " periods " , scholars have now revealed a continuum of " interlocking elements " making it clear that in all times the " spirit of literature " is one .
12 In all weathers the poor critters would be standing parking and what not .
13 In all hotels the reception office is the focal point .
14 Miss Danziger also had it in her favour that she was in all things the opposite of Bo-Bo .
15 In all cases the strife has fundamentally weakened central governments , diverting both energy and money away from development issues to the domestic conflicts which assume overwhelming importance .
16 But in all cases the revolution was filtered by discussion — those long , intermittent , laconic , joking conversations in shops and in guestrooms of private houses .
17 In all cases the movements are assumed to be continuous .
18 In all cases the addition of a straight line component ( px + q ) would serve to move the curve about the grid .
19 In all cases the approaching waves become unbounded as in region II , and as in region III .
20 In all cases the partnership contract carries mutual recognition of value and interest .
21 In all cases the facilities will be used for the purposes of the University .
22 In all cases the explanation is that there is some sort of physical attraction between the centromeres of similar ancestry .
23 In all cases the necessity of balancing professional and academic requirements has been recognised , with the inexorable move toward a ‘ graduate ’ profession being accepted responsibly , though more slowly than for similar professions : ‘ It is a matter for concern that , compared with other professions surveying has not made a greater impact upon university life and thought in general ’ ( Wells Report , 1960 ) .
24 In all these cases , our knowledge of what these words mean in English , and the very general context of our world knowledge would lead us to suppose that in all cases the farmer is the agent and the duckling at the receiving end of the action : the farmer does the killing and the duckling gets killed .
25 In all cases the depth of knowledge required should be more advanced than that required for Professional Examinations .
26 In all cases the ergonomic requirement is that the task as designed should make use of his abilities and be adaptive to his limitations .
27 In all cases the interview was the most important device with qualifications coming second for non-manuals .
28 In all cases the models must actually carry the weapons ascribed to them .
29 In all cases the lower-class ‘ victims ’ are pushed from a natural state of conformity into a state of delinquency by the relative lack of availability of conventional means to achieve conventional goals .
30 In all cases the other is neutralized as a means of encompassing it : ontology amounts to a philosophy of power , an egotism in which the relation with the other is accomplished through its assimilation into the self .
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