Sentence examples for all full from inspiring English sources

"all full" is not technically correct and usable in written English.
"Full" is an adjective and is used to describe a noun; it cannot be used as an independent phrase. A more appropriate phrase would be "all full up", which means that something is completely filled with no additional room. For example: "This cup is all full up; I can't fit anything else in it!".

Exact(38)

They are all full.

All full of plentiful food-related terror.

It's all full of seeds.

"The hotels are almost all full.

It was all full price, that's for sure.

By graduation, I had six 20GB drives, all full.

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Similar(22)

Ryan adds that this is all full-price merchandise.

Suddenly it was all full-on.

Over all, full-time work in retail is slightly down.

The employment of all full-time faculty would be reviewed.

Fees Currently £3,145 for all full-time undergraduate courses.

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