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all along

ADVERB
  1. all the time or over a period of time
    the hope had been there all along
    She had known all along

How To Use all along In A Sentence

  • The major problem is punters here expect a diet of top-class football along with decent grub. The Sun
  • The forest all along the mountain curve was spotted with dots of red, yellow, purple and gold, trees just beginning to turn with the season.
  • This link is sort of off-topic but really not, as it's yet another case (as in the present one) of the media doing their level best to shout down "the critics" -- the nattering nabobs of negativism -- and then, years later, admitting that the "gadflies" were right all along, and that what looked like a scam, walked like a scam, and quacked like a scam was -- quelle surprise! Funky math with Mark Larabee (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • They had divers arsenals, or piratic harbors, as likewise watch towers and beacons, all along the sea-coast; and fleets were here received that were well manned with the finest mariners, and well served with the expertest pilots, and composed of swift sailing and light-built vessels adapted for their special purpose. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • He was a powerful monarch, -- so powerful that the Greeks, who had built cities all along the coast of Asia Minor, in the country called Ionia, never spoke of him except as "The Great King. The Story of the Greeks
  • You old devil! You were planning this all along!
  • On the wall alongside us was a tiled, tropical landscape of pastel cockatoos and parrots.
  • Plantations are equivalents of big zamindaris all along the Mississippi.
  • She knew the truth all along and was laughing up her sleeve at us.
  • I've been saying it all along: it's just a matter of time till they "Mandingo" him. The "R" stands for "Racist"
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