Example sentences of "great [noun] of [noun] for the " in BNC.

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1 In England , as elsewhere , ‘ even though their help could not be counted upon ’ , children and kin were providing the greatest share of support for the older generation of their families .
2 The hon. Member for Honiton talked as if there were a great wave of support for the view that he and others advocate on this matter .
3 It is also clear that there was a great deal of support for the old church throughout the country , and particularly from the gentry elites of provincial England .
4 This causes a great deal of anxiety for the parents of a girl child , for they start immediately after her puberty to worry about her marriage if she is not already married .
5 At Bethlehem , New Hampshire , the highest village east of the Rockies , the Boston and Maine created a delightful , half-timbered chalet-style building with a great deal of space for the horse-drawn coaches and carriages which conveyed excursionists from the station .
6 It would certainly create more work for the lawyers but would not add a great deal of protection for the ordinary person .
7 Even with the simplest database management program for microcomputers used in schools , there is a great deal of flexibility for the design of databases to suit particular needs .
8 Large companies such as Coca Cola , Mars and many others pay a great deal of money for the privilege of using the logo .
9 The whisky is bottled there and dispatched abroad , earning a great deal of money for the coffers of the Chancellor .
10 The country has a great deal of sympathy for the prince and princess but the people are anxious to know the whole story . ’
11 I have a great deal of sympathy for the hon. Gentleman , because I am sure that all hon. Members are annoyed when they do not receive replies to letters .
12 This trend towards a greater reliance upon jobs in service industries does not by itself , however , hold out a great deal of hope for the long-term male unemployed , or the emerging underclass .
13 Such an outcome would have caused a great deal of trouble for the council which could have been largely avoided if the resolution had been directly challenged soon after it was made under Ord. 53 .
14 Her father had always had a great deal of time for the Sally Ann .
15 Thus , older workers were more than twice as likely as those under 40 to say that they had a great deal of respect for the top management at the firm ( 72 per cent ) .
16 I have a great deal of respect for the officials and managers of my local offices .
17 Royston Lambert , who undertook a great deal of research for the Commission , recorded the prayer of a twelve-year-old boy :
18 There is a great deal of room for the courts to interpret these words .
19 We recommend contacting Cedok once you know where you want to go as they can arrange package holidays as well as provide a great deal of information for the independent traveller .
20 Jiang praised the armed forces for their loyalty and " high degree of political awareness " in quelling the " counter-revolutionary rebellion " in June , calling the PLA " a strong pillar of the people 's democratic dictatorship and a great wall of steel for the socialist motherland " .
21 Of all the changes in the last two generations , only the great reservoirs of water for the industrial cities of the North and Midlands have added anything to the scene that one can contemplate without pain .
22 People have a great sense of affection for the county and for their district .
23 By the end of 1942 , the great year of success for the Axis , things were starting to change dramatically .
24 The ‘ floating cloche ’ makes it possible to cover much greater areas of plants for the same outlay .
25 Although their long galleries and multitude of rooms provided a greater degree of privacy for the gentry families , the homes were still very much public places , the more so according to the rank of the owner .
26 Further , recall Channon 's argument that many such multi-unit enterprises in Britain have , over recent years , found the ‘ functional ’ model of organisation — i.e. the monolithic top-down hierarchy — to be too inflexible and have quite deliberately changed over to a multidivisional form , reforming the managerial apparatus to restrict the role of the general office and permit a greater degree of autonomy for the management of the operating units .
27 The consequence of this immediacy is a greater degree of autonomy for the figure :
28 The greater suitability of children for the new tasks was lauded in terms of their " quickness " and their " nimble " fingers .
29 The criterion for inclusion in the " left handed " group was a greater preference of skill for the left hand in any one of four specified activities .
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