Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] it was for " in BNC.

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1 Generally speaking , the longer the period of planning for an escape the more satisfactory it was for the prospective escaper .
2 He could see how hopeless it was for her .
3 She remembered the bride of one year , alight with the happiness of those early celebrations when the Grand Duke had granted the first liberties , and thought how strange it was for an English woman to be so mad with joy .
4 ‘ People still write about how strange it was for me to be with someone like Catherine , ’ he says .
5 Christian preachers could declare how wrong it was for an individual to be dominated by another so as to be his legal property , and to be bought for much less than the rich would give for a racehorse .
6 In few cases was the curriculum criticized adversely , but in one or two cases a particular course was questioned in terms of how appropriate it was for the pupils , or because an aspect of the curriculum was underdeveloped .
7 On the Monday they showed how easy it was for top-class bowlers to pitch the ball up and get wickets .
8 He knew how easy it was for someone to conceal himself amongst the clutter of hanging garments , unseen and unsuspected , while even grown-ups went about their business in ignorance of his presence .
9 OEEC demonstrated how easy it was for policies of coordination to clash with national wishes and interests .
10 A group of fifth form pupils when asked for their response after using a simulation on the Arab-Israeli situation , remarked that one thing it had demonstrated was how easy it was for the countries to slide into war !
11 They often discussed his family together and how hard it was for a single man to bring up children alone .
12 She told herself later that she could n't have been expected to remember what a knife-edge he lived on , how hard it was for him to trust anyone .
13 Then he said I was too innocent to realise how hard it was for him just to see me for half an hour and a kiss and cuddle . ’
14 No one would know how hard it was for her to act the bride she would never be .
15 After he had left the office his senior colleague observed with undisguised admiration how well Fred knew his district and how valuable it was for an officer to have such knowledge at his fingertips .
16 Wandsworth MIND insisted last week the ban had been only temporary , although director Frank Dillon was unable to say how long it was for .
17 He stressed how unwise it was for the House to curtail Committee stages .
18 In our first Report we tried as far as possible to avoid the word ‘ grammar ’ , and to explain how important it was for children to use linguistic terminology .
19 They knew how important it was for a baby to have fresh air and sun .
20 Most meal-times took an hour or more but she had realized how important it was for him to eat .
21 Our guide Sam gave us very clear instructions — he did n't need to emphasise how important it was for us to do exactly as he said .
22 At Moss Green , GIST was called in to address the second-year class before they made craft mini-options , to stress how important it was for girls to consider getting a grounding in technology .
23 She knew how important it was for him to be in a good army , and if the war had ended in Rhodesia , then perhaps another might start in one of France 's old colonies so that the Legion could get involved .
24 He leaned forward , smiling , playing the perfect host , knowing how important it was for him to win these young men over .
25 When one turns from internal to external trade , one sees that some men at any rate recognized how important it was for England to control the sea .
26 During the summer , the Prime Minister kept saying how essential it was for him to be present at Maastricht in December in order to make decisions , but the word from Downing street now is that the Prime Minister 's greatest ambition at Maastricht is to fend off making any decisions .
27 Oh , how doubly difficult it was for them both .
28 He appreciated how difficult it was for me ‘ to give way ’ , what a wrench it was for someone who always operated on his own to cooperate with an act he neither understood nor , at that time , actively sought .
29 As Scott later pointed out , he then reversed his usual argument that Gothic did not provide enough light , by explaining how difficult it was for the Speaker to control the sunlight coming through the windows of his house in the Houses of Parliament .
30 The New York Herald headlined ‘ These Girl 's Do n't Drink , Smoke or Flirt ’ and printed an article , attributed to Mary , in which she explained how difficult it was for her to maintain discipline in a society where young girls were surrounded on every side by such bad examples of free and easy ways in all walks of life .
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