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all for
Completely in favor of something or someone, as in I'm all for eating before we leave, or The players are all for the new soccer coach. This colloquial phrase was first recorded in 1864.
Example Sentences
“I’m all for them deporting the criminals,” said the Santa Ana resident.
Responding to the protests, the LA Police Department said it made 29 arrests, almost all for failure to disperse, which is a misdemeanour, according to the BBC's media partner CBS News.
They’ve got great names for all their paint — I could probably name them all for you, literally.
You are mining it all for the character work, so you’ve got to find it, but I don’t need to then infect my own children with it.
All for the love of billionaire tax cuts.
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