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

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1 The man had all the markings of a weirdo .
2 While I am gradually declassed : mocked and spurned by all the liberties of love .
3 As for his sister , the woman is tied to Anjou , producing infants , and we have a competent man already on the throne , and one , ’ he added shrewdly , ‘ who has promised to confirm all the liberties of the Church . ’
4 The broad-fronted houses stood between oak trees that were dressed in all the splendour of autumn bronze .
5 The man who spoke was enough like the priest in face and build to indicate their relationship , but , instead of the severe black habit and tonsured head which proclaimed the cleric to be of the Benedictine order , he was dressed in all the splendour of a prosperous baron .
6 If the data have been ordered into contigs then the positives should occur in overlapping runs ( Fig 3 ) , and inconsistencies in the data are immediately apparent by eye because all the hybridisations to each clone are visible , including those which do not fit well with the current order of clones and probes .
7 She crossed her arms and stood there bristling with all the counter-strength of the street .
8 The herbs flourished in her tiny garden , with roses , peonies , lilies and carnations which were the envy of all the gardeners in Lulling .
9 She left the attic , by he ladder this time , and then kicked all the junk into a great heap along the banisters .
10 All the glamour of its life springs not from the father but from the Godless world .
11 Behind the famous outcry of the converted Muslim princess in his poem lay a century in which theologians had humanized Christian teaching , and Christian and Muslim had met and mingled on all the frontiers of southern and south-eastern Christendom .
12 I do n't know if you have seen the sort of thing ; you 'll find a list of all the counties of the United Kingdom , all the archbishops of Canterbury , the ten most expensive diamonds in the world , and similar trivial pieces of information .
13 You 'll be doing all the washing-up on your own , Keith , I can tell you .
14 They had quarrelled all the time and his mum had slammed out and left all the washing-up in the sink which he and Gary had to do when they ran out of plates .
15 She rushed up and threw her arms around her in a totally uncharacteristic gesture of affection , and felt all the stress of Piers Morrison lift from her shoulders as they began chatting animatedly about everything under the sun , catching up on old news .
16 ‘ I 'd recommend walking to anyone , when you are out in the countryside you forget all about work and the bills coming through the post all the stress of everyday life disappears .
17 He told Selina : ‘ When I find somebody who is capable of taking on all the duties of a queen , it wo n't matter whether she is Royal , aristocratic or a commoner .
18 She may shock , or upset ; but to women she represents a power with which they want to be in touch , as their birthright , one that operates naturally in the medium of night , when all the duties of day are left behind .
19 The medical officer of an institution was , subject to the direction of the management committee , to visit and attend the inmates regularly , and to carry out all the duties of his predecessor with additional duties laid down by the Act .
20 But although the imperial bureaucracy was growing in size , it was too small to take over all the duties for which landlords had been responsible .
21 All the roads into town are just awful .
22 ‘ He could see all the roads from Maguire 's garden .
23 So they took me on and the to cut all the roads from Kirkland right to West Mainland right out into Kirkwall and .
24 Here the road is still cobbled , as were all the roads in the island until the late 1970s .
25 A road map shows all the roads in an area .
26 So I said , I 'll cut all the roads in the West Mainland if you want .
27 I could never have imagined , however , how rich my life was going to be : how many friends we were to make , the places in the world we were to visit , and all the wealth of love and kindness from others we were to experience .
28 Apart from the swine , and a few small fields where corn was grown , and half a dozen apple trees , and the pigeons and the rabbits , the money the travellers spent at the Inn was all the wealth of Ridgery Butts .
29 The aristocracy — ie. titled landowners — do still exist and have been joined by the very wealthy ( through ownership or investment ) : it has been reckoned that this 1% of adult population owns one-quarter of all the wealth in Britain .
30 ‘ Everybody who carries a knife should know that if they try to take it into a club , they wo n't just be banned from that club , but all the clubs in town . ’
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