-
Almost without exception, development was seen as the way of the future in California and across the country.
ECONOMIST: American politics
-
But the offerings were, almost without exception, rather grim, and few promised a life at anything near standard speed.
NEWYORKER: Little Strangers
-
During the four-day blackout in lower Manhattan after the storm, I saw people behave admirably almost without exception.
FORBES: After Sandy in Manhattan: Now Comes the Hard Part
-
The regional press is controlled almost without exception by the German publishing company Passauer Neue Presse through its subsidiary the Vltava-Labe-Press.
BBC: NEWS | Europe | The press in the Czech Republic
-
They will almost without exception be connected together via an ever-expanding network.
FORBES: Everything Changes With The Internet Of Everything
-
Almost without exception, the U.S. economic reports have come in above expectations.
FORBES: Bulls Should Enjoy Good Start to 2011
-
Almost without exception, top American diplomats will not discuss Kabul Bank, the investigation into Mahmoud Karzai, or any other investigation of senior Afghan officials.
NEWYORKER: The Afghan Bank Heist
-
Those reports almost without exception cite online bookseller Amazon.com -- which Bezos launched in July 1995 -- as living proof that Internet retailing works.
FORBES: Does Amazon.com really matter?
-
It is thanks to this co-operation, says DC Sadler, that month on month, almost without exception, the number of people receiving drugs treatment across the North East has gradually increased.
BBC: NEWS | UK | England | Treating causes of drug addiction
-
In my experience, the immigrant workers that I have had the pleasure of knowing have, almost without exception, all worked harder than any native UK resident I know, for a fraction of the pay and benefits.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Magazine | Secret life of the office cleaner
-
That is because the countries of Europe, almost without exception, are signatories to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act, which obliges them to encourage "the effective exercise of civil, political, social, cultural and other rights and freedoms" abroad.
FORBES: Commentary
-
Yet the commissioners seem almost to have accepted the case for preserving the rule without exception.
ECONOMIST: The law