Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] for [art] " in BNC.
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1 | And , most importantly for the lads , judging by the roar which greeted its first appearance , he can still windmill his right arm . |
2 | I really want to go out and kick some ass one last time for Jeffrey , for me , for us , and most importantly for the people who come to see us . ’ |
3 | Four ‘ change-facilitating factors ’ are picked out by Ramon ; heavy and unchanging reliance on segregated institutions ; the existence of a minority of psychiatrists prepared to act politically ( while not having the desire to act in a party political framework ) ; the autonomous nature of the regions leading to more enthusiastic reform beginning in socialist and communist areas ; and perhaps most importantly for the concerns of this book , |
4 | The world 's clearest sea water has been recorded in the Weddell Sea in early spring , clear enough for a Secchi disc to be seen at a depth of 79 m ( Gieskes et al . , |
5 | Additional imports generated may have been around 15 per cent for the United Kingdom , rather less for the EEC but a good deal more for the United States . |
6 | Unfortunately he 'd been burned , but not badly enough for the bone structure to be altered as it was in Lawton 's case . ’ |
7 | And then we went right through Belgium and Holland , we were stuck in Holland for er in luckily enough for the winter . |
8 | Houghton convinced himself he was searching so avidly for the match that he was almost willing himself to find it . |
9 | Morse looked at her now — perhaps properly for the first time . |
10 | His preparing himself so keenly for a new and final phase of the war , and then not seeing even the beginning of it , was the final irony . |
11 | If this were so , the strengthening of the various associations generated by the inhibitory conditioning procedure would proceed only slowly for a pre-exposed stimulus and this effect could well outweigh any advantage that the existence of a stimulus-no event association might bestow . |
12 | It had seemed perfectly all right for a working married couple , but now they were to be invaded . |
13 | His wife Maggie kept on eye on him but said it was all right for a special occasion and that he could rejoin the pledge tomorrow . |
14 | It 's all right for a man ; men are used to smutty books and vulgar jokes — women do n't go for things like that . ’ |
15 | ‘ I 'm all right for a couple of minutes . ’ |
16 | I 'd also got an injunction against him because he became violent , and that was all right for a bit . |
17 | Pat said quickly , " Well , we can go to 45 But surely it is all right for a few minutes here . " |
18 | The wheels would be all right for a couple of days ; then they 'd become ten times worse and they 'd have to come to the smithy . |
19 | ‘ I thought he was all right for a millionaire . |
20 | We should be all right for a few moments as it is deeper water ; we can then make for the beach , hopefully avoiding the big dumping surf . ’ |
21 | That would not be all right for a priest . |
22 | The Stage Manager would give him the line , he 'd be all right for a couple more sentences , then , ‘ Sorry , it 's gone again . ’ |
23 | ‘ All right for a start . |
24 | She 'll be all right for a few hours . |
25 | ‘ It 's all right for a special occasion . |
26 | You 're you 're all right for a hair brush then are you ? |
27 | ‘ This 'll be all right for the Ancient Britons as well , ’ he said brandishing ‘ The Stein Song ’ , 'I 'll give it to Mike when we go over . ’ |
28 | So while it was wrong for the IRA to let off bombs in Northern Ireland it was quite all right for the DGSE to let them off in New Zealand . |
29 | ‘ We 'll be all right for the night . ’ |
30 | But apparently he 's all right for the weekend because Saturday is a courting-free day ! ’ |