Example sentences of "and for [det] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 It seems clear that one of the effects of this is that more people are fearful both for their own future and for that of the person who has died .
2 Erm we 're linking with the relevant staff association , erm just some general er points about how we identify and evaluate erm and put together the training plan , And and settling once and for all about the national recognized qualification .
3 Put an end to flyaway hair once and for all with the new Smoothing Complex from the Professional Hair Care System at Boots .
4 This was once Oloron 's cathedral , in the centuries up until 1790 , when the French Revolution did away once and for all with the bishopric .
5 I did once suggest a conference of Scottish historians , Gaelic scholars , the Scottish Mountaineering Club and other authorities , with the Ordnance Survey in attendance , to agree once and for all on the correct spelling of Gaelic place names .
6 Added Miss McIntosh : ‘ It is a very sad day for Stansted Airport , for Essex and for all of the country if American Airlines do indeed pull out . ’
7 It is regarded as " tax revenue allocated once and for all to the Community to finance its budget and accruing to it automatically without the need for any subsequent decision by the national authorities ' ( European Commission 1989b ) .
8 Equating grade C with a pass was just historical , harking back to the days of the O-level , he explained , and the Government was keen to get away once and for all from the pass/fail idea .
9 After You Watch activities for the Episode in its complete form , and for each of the four Sections .
10 This was then used as input to the overlap program that was run separately for each of the 15 documents and for each of the 3 dictionaries .
11 Using this as his measure of , Lucas can carry out a separate regression of on and for each of the countries for which he has data , once he has solved the problem of how to measure for each country .
12 Within a decade , Fothergill was able to give Marshall a descriptive account of the flourishing Upton garden acknowledged , he said , ‘ by the ablest botanists we have , that there is not a richer bit of ground in curious American plants in Great Britain ; and for many of the most curious I am obliged to thy diligence and care . ’
13 As in the 1950s and 1980s , and for many of the same reasons , Labour 's ‘ forward march ’ seemed far from guaranteed .
14 To take but one of many examples , there is a single code to represent all the variations on the Charnley hip replacement procedure — quite adequate for most statistical purposes but falling short of the detail required for audit and for many of the uses to which medical records are put .
15 This has been recognised by the Panel and for many of the purposes of the Code and SARs , " control " is deemed to be the holding of an aggregate of 30 per cent or more of the voting rights of a company .
16 Er , the European project goes on and for many of the newer generations in this place , it 's not longer an article of faith er but a part of the political landscape that has to be dealt with on merit and it 's all the more ludicrous therefore Mr Deputy Speaker , that the Conservatives ' internal divisions over Maastricht have led to a situation where candidates for the ever more important European elections are only now being selected in certain seats , just fourteen weeks before the election .
17 He has long been hailed as a potential leader , and for many on the Right he is still the Thatcherite hero-in-waiting .
18 It was built in 1490 and for much of the time it was owned by the Darrel family .
19 Throughout the late 1960s and for much of the 1970s , the Urban Programme had concentrated on social schemes .
20 And for much of the time it follows the Minchmoor Road , an ancient drove road which was also used by Scottish monarchs staying at Traquair House .
21 To most voters patronage appointments were an economic necessity , and for much of the eighteenth century the relative poverty of so many of the Scottish gentry in comparison to their social counterparts in England eased the task of the politician who sought to manipulate them .
22 It thus seemed as if there was a significant dispute between the Realist and Behaviouralist camps , and for much of the 1950s and 1960s this dispute was carried on in the pages of the professional journals .
23 Despite their increasing equity stake in capitalist enterprises they provide relatively little new investment finance and for much of the time act as passive collectors of dividends .
24 Only the political pertinence of that collectivity was variable , and for much of the time its pertinence was low .
25 As Stoker and Wilson note ( 1986 , p. 292 ) while ‘ over many issues and for much of the time the group may simply endorse decisions taken elsewhere , at the very least senior councillors and officers must be careful not to offend the core political values and commitments of backbenchers ’ .
26 Paths are undefined up to summit and for much of the descent , but route-finding is quite easy in clear weather .
27 The substantial rise in the real value of wages in the late fourteenth century and for much of the fifteenth almost certainly reflects a shortage of workers .
28 Indeed , in a sense , they were a unifying part of the structure of the Frankish state in the sixth century and for much of the seventh .
29 The same goes for your basement or your cellar and for some of the things you may store there .
30 County roles take members into schools in their day-to-day work , and for some of the team 's functions ( especially the selection of schools for recommendation for inclusion in the project ) the project role is being played at the same time .
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