Example sentences of "remember for " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Oh , Mama had a nice line in that , as well as Papa , ’ said McAllister , remembering for once to use the past tense when speaking of her parents .
2 Nothing near as tasty and tender as our … ’ and , her mouth overflowing with steak , beans and croquette potato , Mitzi named an Austrian breed Elisabeth had never heard of ( and did not imagine she would need to remember for future use ) .
3 National Westminster Bank , in its 10 points to remember for would-be choosers of a franchise operation , says : ‘ Make a personal assessment of the franchiser 's management skills and track record .
4 The important points to remember for the next series of lessons are these …
5 A day to remember for 13-year-old Julian Stewart as he enjoys the ride flanked by Phil Kearns ( left ) and David Campese .
6 She sighed in anticipation , this would be an evening to remember for ever .
7 Which is the easiest one to remember for working out the salt out of these four here ?
8 Or F F is easier to remember for full document .
9 ‘ It was a day to remember for the rest of our lives , was n't it ? ’ a voice said behind her , and she jumped , startled .
10 Things to remember for S.Africa
11 It should be a day to remember for Chapman , who has been in the business for 30 years .
12 After another good quarter , Ken ‘ Godfather ’ Burkinshaw , Area Manager for Pest Control North East instructed his hit man Barry White to organise a day to remember for his sales team .
13 It was certainly a Cheltenham to remember for Charlie and he recalled it with relish .
14 With the right approach , globetrotting teenagers can have a journey to remember for a lifetime .
15 They wanted to make it a game to remember for their boss , for birthday boy , Glenn , but on the night , sadly , there was no icing on the Town cake .
16 IT was a weekend to remember for North Down 's cricket sides , Bangor cementing their Section One future and North Down lifting the Schweppe 's All-Ireland Cup .
17 Y'know that somehow um , perhaps rather like the psychoanalytic notion of repression , something like that , somehow um er they 've been unable to remember for a number of years , possibly even decades , and er something triggers it .
18 I ca n't remember for certain but I think my wage was £2 per week .
19 ‘ It was a lovely moment , something I am sure they will remember for the rest of their lives , ’ said one .
20 And it 's something I 'll remember for the rest of my life .
21 The kind of thing a man would remember for the rest of his days .
22 They thought it normal for tea to come out of the fridge or the oven in a tinfoil box with a peel-back lid , although they did remember for weeks afterwards Lucy 's occasional cordon-bleu phases , when the house had been filled with heart-warming smells , and different kinds of food had appeared out of saucepans on top of the oven , and other dishes inside it .
23 Can you remember for example , given the the levels of relief you are advocating are acceptable on the blue route , how such roads such a link as an alternative to the western link would perform .
24 ‘ It 's one of the fastest times I can remember for so early in the season , ’ said Christie .
25 They were mementoes of a journey which all the team will remember for the rest of their lives .
26 However , if they are both read in close conjunction to each other , readers will experience strong emotions combined with a beautiful story , that they will remember for a long long time .
27 complicated when you start it out , but if you ca n't remember for the life of you then , it 's quite
28 Lincoln Brower has shown that birds learn to avoid aposematic prey after very few ‘ trials ’ ( usually less than five ) , while Mariam Rothschild at Cambridge University has produced clear evidence that birds remember for many months to associate particular colour patterns in prey , with distasteful experiences .
29 ‘ We 're looking for things people remember for certain , ’ Miller says , ‘ and they often do n't recall why they did them . ’
30 But before the great affair struck up , one looked around at the new faces : Steve Milligan , who used to be our foreign editor at the Sunday Times , Lady Olga Maitland , nicer than her impossible opinions , whom I chiefly remember for being very good about expenses at the Sunday Express ( one wonders if Kelvin Mackenzie might have slipped in late for Chislehurst ) , Nigel Jones , the Lib Dem from Cheltenham with the Lenin beard , and a man and woman sitting together , pointed out as Gordon and Brigid Prentice who , if they flourish in Labour politics , will be compared in the Sun two elections from now with the Ceausescus .
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