Example sentences of "allow for a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And here I ought to perhaps make it clear that the circles I provided on the sheet which was distributed , allow for a density of twenty houses per hectare .
2 Such architectures allow for a range of subtle interactions between units , while supporting essentially parallel computation .
3 SCOTVEC 's certification arrangements allow for a framework of awards designed to combine the high degree of flexibility contained in a modular system with the clarity and ease of recognition of separately certificated Group Awards for particular programmes of modules .
4 As we saw , there are broadly two schools of Marxist thought — those which rely on an instrumental view of the state-economy relationship and those of a structuralist type , which allow for a degree of freedom for the state and discuss power in terms of hegemony and control .
5 Stiffer penalties for the principal offence embodied in the 1974 Act were awaiting implementation during fieldwork : these allow for a fine of £400 or three months imprisonment , or both , on summary conviction , and for ‘ a fine ’ ( without maximum ) or two years imprisonment , or both , on conviction on indictment .
6 Instead it is necessary to think in terms of a bundle of policies translated through design guidelines into the construction of specific physical facilities that allow for a diversity of cycling needs .
7 More realistic accounts of the budget constraint allow for a level of unearned income Y u and the presence of an overtime premium on the basic wage rate when the standard work week is exceeded .
8 ‘ But if you allow for a middleman … ’
9 However , building society merger rules , allow for a maximum 1 per cent of assets to be distributed among members in this case .
10 Most vendors allow for a margin of negotiation anyway .
11 Overall , equations ( 9.78 ) and ( 9.79 ) allow for a signal being fed in at one end of a transmission line , propagating along it and being partially reflected at the other end to give a wave travelling in the opposite direction .
12 As a rough and ready indication of the possible errors here , we allow for an error of 15 per cent in either direction , which may be conservative .
13 We think we should not accept ‘ I like Auntie Kate ’ as a valid communication unless we allow for an answer to the question , ‘ How does he know ? ’ or ‘ What observation justifies him in saying that ? ’
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