Example sentences of "catering [prep] the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 There were 23 voluntary colleges of higher education in England and Wales in 1985 , catering for the equivalent of approximately 25,000 full-time students .
2 However , morally speaking , the nature of these states can not be seen to be catering for the betterment of the broad masses but the consolidation of a ruling groups power .
3 Returning to Madeira , we find that the island is catering for the demands of a new breed of tourists who wish for a more active holiday than the traditional visitor who relaxed in the comfort of the luxury hotels or lazed around the swimming pool or at the lido .
4 Competitively , snooker has until the last few years been confined to Britain and its old Commonwealth , but there have always been a few tables in the Far East , catering for the needs of expats .
5 In October 1981 be floated the company on the Stock Exchange and four months later be merged Habitat with Mothercare , the world 's largest chain of stores catering for the needs of mothers and babies , and became chairman of the Habitat Mothercare Group plc .
6 Although professionalism was restricted and most governing sports bodies held themselves aloof from the pursuit of profit , the impression remains that sport soon became part of a ‘ leisure , industry catering for the needs of a new kind of urban consumer .
7 Made in tough , impact absorbing braided netting , Helios cylinder protectors encompass a full range of cylinder sizes catering for the needs of all breathing apparatus and Scuba users — and in a range of colours including blue , red and yellow .
8 I think the worst of all locations would be a , would be one where the new settlement would be catering for the needs of Leeds , if it were were located along the A sixty four corridor , South South South of York .
9 In this task , the production of materials catering for the needs of pupils of all abilities will be seen as a priority .
10 I do feel on the question of whether we are bringing people into the Harrogate area or catering for the needs of the residential population .
11 The council says the scheme will give pedestrians greater comfort and safety as well catering for the needs of the disabled .
12 Nevertheless , even catering for the eloquence of the after-dinner story teller , this abrupt introduction of Doctor Who into the Serials Department does serve to give an insight into two men who shaped much of what later went before the cold eyes of the BBC cameras .
13 At Aberdeen Journals the restaurant is open virtually round the clock , catering for the staff at Aberdeen 's two newspapers and Press and Journal and the Evening Express .
14 Three hundred years of catering for the City of London were celebrated by Ring & Brymer at the Museum of London last week .
15 Textbooks catering for the upsurge in legal education in the 1950s and 1960s sought to capture in print the mysterious unwritten secrets of a constitution which had emerged into the democratic world without appearing to have changed at all .
16 Catering & Allied Services has broken the mould of contract catering in the UK with the introduction of a scheme which allows different companies in one building to share full-service staff restaurant facilities .
17 Er facilities er exist for parking and so on and the only thing is , er I 'm talking about catering in the sense of a Saturday whether it 's here or there .
18 These include security , staging , promotion , marketing , radio adverts , catering on the night for the artist , carrying the equipment in and out of the hall , the PRS percentage , the hall hire , as well as the printing and distribution of posters .
19 The importance of catering to the tastes of more affluent middle-aged people is underpinned by the increase in their numbers and high spending power .
20 By definition , a state of equilibrium does not permit activity designed to outstrip the efforts of others in catering to the wishes of the market .
21 Catering to the needs of the poor would hardly have doubled the number of London architects in twenty years ( from just over 1,000 to 2,000 — in the 1830s there had probably been fewer than one hundred ) , though building and renting slum property could be a very lucrative business , judged by the income per cubic foot of low-cost space .
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