Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun sg] for much " in BNC.

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1 This was the question of the hour for much of January 1991 and thoroughly documented by Platt 's .
2 In fact copepods , notably Calanoides acutus , Calanus propinquus and Rhincalanus gigas , form the bulk of the zooplankton for much of the time ( Voronina , 1966 , 1968 ; Hopkins , 1971 ) .
3 The system is designed for fairly low volumes so it is more suited to an art studio than in-plant work but many companies already use it instead of a phototypesetter for much of their origination .
4 Samuel Johnson , who was something of a hero of the new school , once remarked that a man is seldom so innocently employed as when he is making money , and that celebrated remark might serve as a slogan for much of modern British fiction .
5 It was the immense prestige of French culture and the status of the French monarchy as a model for much of Europe which gave the language its dominant position in diplomacy .
6 Families of dolls or puppets provide children with the opportunity for much free imaginative play .
7 The trolleybuses were unable to get up the hill for much of the next day .
8 Platinum demand in general industrial sectors was however affected by the recession and investors in the metal were absent from the market for much of the year .
9 For their part the Brazilians want to play British oppositon to remind themselves of what it feels like to be searching for the ball in the air for much of the game .
10 His own father , Prince Philip , was in the Navy for much of his childhood and the relationship between father and son was in any event a difficult one .
11 If drainage is too efficient , however , little water may be present in the regolith for much of the time and rates of weathering will consequently be reduced .
12 He had been in and out of the England team for ten years and had played 55 Tests , probably the best off-spinner in the world for much of this time .
13 However , Sergei Freidzon , a former Soviet planner , identifies two additional standing bodies : an Institution of Permanent Advisers ( 19 civilians , as well as the CGS and two First Deputy Defence Ministers ) and a larger Institution of Permanent Consultants ( 50 per cent military , 50 per cent civilian ) , both of which are in harness to the Council for much of the year .
14 To protect the scene , the park was closed off to the public for much of the day but has since been re-opened .
15 This must seem like bliss to those who were on the rack for much of the last three years .
16 This was attributable mainly to an increase in the number of branches , from 158 in 1953–54 to 189 in 1957–58 ; losses in Bedfordshire ( 15 branches down to 11 ) and the Fenland ( 23 down to 15 ) , both of which had been without a tutor-organiser for much of the period , were more than offset by gains everywhere else , notably in Essex ( 27 branches up to 40 ) and Suffolk ( 14 up to 32 ) .
17 Former Scotland captain Rioch , 44 , has been barracked by fans at the Den for much of a disappointing campaign after failing to build on last season 's success of reaching the promotion play-offs .
18 The act of conception , staring at a typewriter for much of 1985 in a flat in Notting Hill Gate so depressed me that I immediately thereafter applied for a job as doctor for Amoco , who were then exploring for oil near Morondava .
19 It goes through four churches , a stone and a moat , as well as being followed by a road for much of its length .
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