Example sentences of "[noun sg] to make [noun] for the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The room was still in the mess in which the incident squad had left it , the desks pushed together to serve as mortuary slabs and the movable screens stacked to one side to make way for the meat sacks being carried out .
2 ( 10 ) Throughout Stages 1 and 2 , DCSLs may be involved in advising schools , librarians , or library committees on practical matters , from suggesting trends in library layout ( for schools relocating or refurbishing their libraries in anticipation of , or as a result of , receiving a project grant ) to advising on precise requirements of order forms , the need to " weed " old stock to make space for the new acquisitions , and the desirability or updating or devising a new catalogue .
3 Mr d'Ancona admits : ‘ It was probably harder to get British industry to respond to the legitimate requirements of the oil industry than to get the oil industry to make allowance for the legitimate interests of the supply industry . ’
4 Here was the woman I wanted to marry , the woman I thought of every day as I looked beyond the cell to make plans for the future .
5 once the strength of the new week 's material has been assessed , the next move is to decide which records will be removed from the present playlist to make room for the new ones .
6 Another and perhaps even more striking example of the undesirability of the practice can be found in the case of Woolwich Equitable Building Society v. IRC where the finance Act 1985 had included sections enabling the Inland Revenue to make regulations for the payment by building societies of tax on ‘ such sums as may be determined in accordance with regulations ’ and went on to provide that any such regulations might contain ‘ such incidental and consequential provisions as appear to the Board to be appropriate ’ .
7 We dismantled the imprinting equipment to make way for the passive avoidance pens and I set about raising the grant money to let us move into full swing .
8 The thousands of tons of earth which were to be dug out of the meadow to make room for the foundations were to be piled up in nearby Merton playing field .
9 The outer room was already full of readers but people were being turned out of the inner room to make way for the meeting .
10 " Well , if Dr Sawyer 's given permission Tilda advanced , with Martha lingering doubtfully behind , and swept several plants from the loaded windowsill to make room for the Suncrush .
11 All furniture had to be removed from the nave to make room for the flowers .
12 2.2.3 ( subject as provided in clauses 2.3 and 2.4 ) in accordance with the building documents There must be an obligation on the landlord to make application for the approvals as soon as possible after the agreement has been entered into .
13 Women and children were to report at the school in the morning to make arrangements for the care and education of the evacuees .
14 More than forty thousand people were moved from the old city centre to make way for the new buildings , but even though stereotyped blocks of flats were put up around the site of the palace and were in many cases completed by the spring of 1988 , they remained empty until after the revolution .
15 She 's been giving me strange looks ever since I got here — doubtless because it 's not exactly commonplace for the star of the show to make bookings for the lowly make-up artist . ’
16 Silas introduced them , and in an effort to make amends for the earlier incident on the highway she held out her hand and spoke quietly .
17 The railway station has been re-sited down the line to make room for the town 's bypass .
18 That 's why they had torn down the children 's hospital to make room for the miniature golf course .
19 Normal accounting principles require the company to make provision for the onerous lease , because it is effectively a liability that may have no corresponding economic benefit in the future .
20 On his return to Uralmash from a business course in West Germany in 1988 , Mr Korovin set up a joint venture with an Austrian company to make equipment for the continuous casting of steel .
21 According to the ancient wisdom , spiritual growth involves transcending the limited and short-sighted Ego to make way for the Self .
22 Once an integrated representation of the clause as a unit is created , the specific words making up the clause can be discarded from memory to make way for the words of the next clause .
23 In reality , the saloon is mounted on the frame and bogies of Pantograph car 170 of 1928 , whose body was scrapped in 1961 in order to make way for the Rocket .
24 During Stage II you may well find that you will need to give up one or both of your snacks each day in order to make way for the higher calorie foods that you will be adding to your diet .
25 The bill also dissolved , from December 1992 , the High Commission for the Fight against the Mafia ( which since the early 1980s had had little success ) in order to make way for the new Anti-Mafia Investigation Directorate ( DIA ) .
26 I would therefore ask you to contact myself or Mr Day as soon as possible in order to make arrangements for the training to be organised .
27 ‘ And if possible try to make amends for the rude way you spoke to Lucy .
28 The grynd continues , but these days the whale meat is no longer needed for food , and islanders are often having to empty last year 's whale meat from the freezer to make way for the fresh catch .
29 This Meeting , taking also into Consideration the numbers of Complaints against makers & sellers of yearn in Isla , hereby appoint that a Mercat for yearn shall be held at Bowmore on the first Tuesday of March yearly , and on such other days as they afterwards shall appoint , And hereby ordain the Clerk to make advertisments for the different Parish Kirks .
30 The facts of the case contained three elements : ( 1 ) DORA , giving power to make Regulations for the public safety and defence of the realm ; ( 2 ) the ‘ daughter ’ Regulations made under DORA , allowing the food Controller to regulate dealings in any article ; and ( 3 ) the Food Controller 's Order ( ‘ granddaughter ’ of DORA ) that no milk should be sold without licence , coupled with his grant of a licence on condition of receiving payment .
  Next page