All
in sentence
17008 examples of All in a sentence
I know that you do this
all
the time, and yet, still, I'm so grateful to you for having the courage to come and talk about that on this stage.
But what's the one question that you get asked
all
the time that you can share with everyone here so you don't have to answer it 1000 times throughout the rest of the week?
EN: The question I get asked most often is actually the question underneath pretty much
all
the other questions, so, can you get addicted to your vibrator, please help me with my erectile dysfunction?
My father moved to Germany, studied there and married, and as a result, I now have this half-German brain, with
all
the analytical thinking and that slightly dorky demeanor that come with that.
If you go to the Irish countryside and you ask an old lady for directions, brace yourself for some elaborate Irish storytelling about
all
the landmarks, yeah?
So, in other words, if there was a street in an outskirt where there had been a bus, we put a bus back in, only now these buses wouldn't run
all
the way to the city center, but connect to the nearest rapid-transport mode, one of these thick lines over there.
Lord and Lady Rigor Mortis were nibbling on the tarmac, and then the gun went off and
all
the girlies started running, and
all
the mummies went, "Run!
And
all
the girlies, girlies running, running, running, everybody except for my daughter, who was just standing at the starting line, just waving, because she didn't know she was supposed to run.
Now, I just want to end with saying, if we follow reason, we realize that I think we'd
all
say that we want to have a perception of terrorism which is not just a pure military perception of it.
I had to learn
all
these things.
I think we can
all
be life preservers.
Now she is the personification of courage, because she's going to stand up here and talk to you
all.
All
the ones in bold are eight to 10 years old.
We also found out about the height of the ceiling, and we managed to reconstruct, therefore,
all
the layout of this original hall the way it was before there came Vasari, and restructured the whole thing, including a staircase that was very important in order to precisely place "The Battle of Anghiari" on a specific area of one of the two walls.
Well, we thought, well, if we
all
have this pleasure, this privilege to see
all
this, to find
all
these discoveries, what about for everybody else?
Where has
all
the aid gone?
Of
all
the voice-calling minutes in the world last year, what percentage do you think were accounted for by cross-border phone calls?
Take
all
the real investment that went on in the world in 2010.
So it's very clear that if you look at these numbers or
all
the other numbers that I talk about in my book, "World 3.0," that we're very, very far from the no-border effect benchmark, which would imply internationalization levels of the order of 85, 90, 95 percent.
So does
all
this matter?
It's a little bit like, we wouldn't be having a conference on radical openness if we already thought we were totally open to
all
the kinds of influences that are being talked about at this conference.
What they hadn't counted on was digitization, because that meant that
all
those paper receipts had been scanned in electronically, and it was very easy for somebody to just copy that entire database, put it on a disk, and then just saunter outside of Parliament, which they did, and then they shopped that disk to the highest bidder, which was the Daily Telegraph, and then, you
all
remember, there was weeks and weeks of revelations, everything from porn movies and bath plugs and new kitchens and mortgages that had never been paid off.
It's open-source, with documentation, and it allows you to make a Freedom of Information request, to ask your public body a question, so it takes
all
the hassle out of it, and I can tell you that there is a lot of hassle making these requests, so it takes
all
of that hassle out, and you just type in your question, for example, how many police officers have a criminal record?
It zooms it off to the appropriate person, it tells you when the time limit is coming to an end, it keeps track of
all
the correspondence, it posts it up there, and it becomes an archive of public knowledge.
So I've mentioned WikiLeaks, because surely what could be more open than publishing
all
the material?
It also meant that the Belarussian dictator was given a handy list of
all
the pro-democracy campaigners in that country who had spoken to the U.S. government.
They've locked
all
the doors.
Equally, it could be better than we've been led to believe, but either way, we have to start seeing it exactly as it is, with
all
of its problems, because it's only by seeing it with
all
of its problems that we'll be able to fix them and live in a world in which we can
all
be happily ever after.
But even with
all
these data linking disgust sensitivity and political orientation, one of the questions that remains is what is the causal link here?
Disgust didn't influence attitudes toward
all
the other social groups that we asked, including African-Americans, the elderly.
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