Example sentences of "[verb] what [pron] be for " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Sometimes you do n't even know what they 're for , because the ad is just a cartoon girl taking the dog for a walk or something . |
2 | I just do n't know what they 're for . |
3 | They 're called sandbags , do you know what they were for ? |
4 | Yes especially cos you do n't know what it 's for half the bloody time , she does n't know where she is . |
5 | I 've heard that phrase used but I do n't know what it 's for . |
6 | If one can notice the absence of something one must already know what it is for things to be absent . |
7 | It 's been very hard for years , and now , to be back here , you do n't know what it is for me . |
8 | If your experiment involves other people ( e.g. if you are comparing different readers ' responses ) , you need to consider ethical issues which arise , including ( a ) getting their permission to use the results ; ( b ) showing them the results and explaining them ; ( c ) not using their names when you report the experiment ( even if they have given permission for this , there is unlikely to be any point ) ; ( d ) the ethical problem that sometimes an experiment is best conducted if the test subjects do n't know what it is for ; that is , if there is a " secret agenda " . |
9 | Oh I heard the bell but I did n't know what it was for ! |
10 | I forget what they were for . |
11 | They said it does n't matter what it 's for |
12 | I 'll tell you where I had terrific service once , I ca n't remember what it was for now , it 's it 's a shop , it 's called Arcade Records because originally it was in the arcade , but it 's now just above the Cannon Cinema in between you know on Chapel Bar on the left hand side . |
13 | The argument also assumes ( b ) that I can understand what it is for others to have mental states . |
14 | I know what they 're for Chris , but I do n't know what he 's doing with them . |
15 | ‘ I know what it 's for , ’ stated Frick coldly . |
16 | He starts by remarking that scientists and ( at that time ; he was writing in the 1950s ) philosophers usually take science as the understanding of an independent reality , with the presumptions that they know what it is for something to be ‘ real ’ and for someone to ‘ understand ’ it . |
17 | But you can reduce the risk of this sort of tragedy by following these tips : NEVER hand over cash without getting a receipt saying what it 's for . |
18 | Nor is it necessary to know any of x 's relational properties in order to understand what it is for it to be round-shaped or metal . |
19 | Because I had a number of people who 've been on to me talking about the mess on the , on the recreation ground , and asking what it 's for , and as soon as you explain why , you know , it 's been accepted . |
20 | Why does the separation of the mental from the physical make it impossible to show that we understand what it is for there to be other minds than our own , given the separation of the mental from the physical ? |
21 | It gives criticism , and critical theory , no way of knowing what it is for : no way , that is , — of arguing for one kind of production against another , or of valuing some forms over others . |
22 | Now , having spent a hard eight years making clear what we are against , the time has come to describe what we are for . |
23 | Two occasions in the book about his partisans quietly illustrate what he is for his readers in this respect . |
24 | I wonder what they 're for ? |
25 | Ca n't think what it was for now . |
26 | When Tiguary indicated the gun emplacements at intervals in the Belmont stockade and asked what they were for ( he had an idea ) , Kit waved a hand and answered , ‘ So the chickens can pop in and out . |
27 | When Ken asked what it was for , he was told : ‘ This play is essentially stylistic and I want the dialogue to be delivered in a stylistic fashion . ’ |
28 | Compare , ‘ One learns what it is for something to be absent through things being absent ’ ; and , ‘ One learns what it is for something to be absent through noticing the absence of things ’ . |
29 | Compare , ‘ One learns what it is for something to be absent through things being absent ’ ; and , ‘ One learns what it is for something to be absent through noticing the absence of things ’ . |
30 | My first truism is the one Aristotle used to say what it is for a statement to be true or false : ‘ To say of what is , that it is not , or of what is not , that it is , is false ; while to say of what is , that it is , or of what is not , that it is not , is true . ’ |