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be all-inclusive
adjective
Providing all amenities, benefits or perquisites in a single package.
Exact(48)
In both cases the reasoning runs that this necessary being must be all-inclusive and, hence, divine.
Packages should be all-inclusive.
"We want to be all-inclusive," Dr. Muller said.
The amnesty law was meant to be all-inclusive.
It agreed that the talks would be "all-inclusive".
This information is not intended to be all-inclusive.
Similar(12)
"We want to be all inclusive".
The list is not intended to be all inclusive; students interested in the history and philosophy of science should speak to members of the committee.
"If a confrontation starts, it will be all inclusive and much more dangerous than it was 10 years ago," the chief of Georgia's National Security Council, Tedo Dzhaparidze, said Friday.
Surely the solution regarding prayers in public life is to be all inclusive; in which case I genuinely look forward to the fascination of the Buddhist chant, or the rituals of the pagan.
Where the definition of a term in Rule 41(h) was intended to be all inclusive, it is introduced by the phrase "to mean" rather than "to include". Cf. Helvering v. Morgan's, Inc., 293 U.S. 121, 125 n. 1, 55 S.Ct.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com