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

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1 Also for creative arts , a weekly period of music and art would be insufficient ; rather , a rotational arrangement should be employed which allowed pupils to spend more time on music , say , for part of two years , with the opportunity for work in art and perhaps drama at other times ' .
2 For instance , restriction of the opportunity for reproduction in Drosophila to 3–6-day-old flies for 120 generations resulted in a fall in the late but not the early-life fecundity of females in these ’ r' lines relative to that of females of ’ K' lines where adults of any age could breed .
3 The opportunity for experimentation in comparing , selecting and rejecting terms in the PRECIS consultation was an important feature of the search process .
4 ‘ We want to provide the opportunity for change in the viewer , ’ declares George .
5 Given the creditable support that the Minister has previously given to integrated education in Northern Ireland , will he ensure that provision is made within the citizens charter to develop integrated education and to facilitate the opportunity for children in Northern Ireland to enter such education ?
6 It commented favourably on a model form issued by the NFHA for use in connection with design and build .
7 Some local authorities also receive direct government grants from the Department of the Environment under the Urban Programme , which provides 75% of the funding for projects in deprived areas .
8 If we then pick non-selective education as the base for comparison in the school type variable , we will almost certainly avoid negative relationships .
9 The authority says it 's aware of the support for Horton in the community , but changes in health services are inevitable .
10 For the Kikuyu the success of the struggle for independence in Kenya lay in the combination of Kenyatta 's political activities and in the effectiveness of Mau Mau in eroding settler confidence .
11 The Struggle for Disafforestment in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
12 The development of Defence policy since the Second World War has been dominated as much by efforts to find ways off the ‘ Military Road to Absurdity ’ as by the struggle for resources in the Whitehall market-place .
13 e.g. D. Thomson , Europe Since Napoleon ( 1977 ) A.J.P. Taylor , The Struggle for Mastery in Europe , 1848–1918 ( 1971 ) J.M. Roberts , Europe 1880–1945 ( 1967 )
14 But beyond her is that other destiny as yet unfulfilled — the struggle for justice in South Africa today .
15 We feel it is particularly important to publish this article since it represents a community perspective , in this case the writer 's experience of the struggle for health in a housing estate in Glasgow , Scotland , as the backdrop to her experience of the struggle for health in Nicaragua .
16 We feel it is particularly important to publish this article since it represents a community perspective , in this case the writer 's experience of the struggle for health in a housing estate in Glasgow , Scotland , as the backdrop to her experience of the struggle for health in Nicaragua .
17 They can , however , still be distinguished from organized political formations such as parties which are directly engaged in the struggle for power in the sense of seeking to retain or capture the government of some political unit , by the fact that social movements act in a more diffuse way and if they are successful establish only the preconditions for changes of policy or regime by bringing into question the legitimacy of the existing political system ( in part or in whole ) , creating a different climate of opinion , and proposing alternatives .
18 Priority will also be given to cooperation with many social movements which have played a major part in the struggle for democracy in different parts of the world .
19 And we all realize that our responsibility to be the catalyst for peace in the region does not end with the successful conclusion of this war .
20 2.2 Modification of the technique for use in man
21 The terms of the IMF agreement , which immediately unlocked US$325 million in loans from the World Bank , required the Argentine government to set aside one-quarter of the money for use in future commercial bank debt reduction agreements , and to accept an ambitious target of a primary budget surplus equivalent to 3.5 per cent of GDP , or $4,900 million , in the year to June 1992 , out of which to pay interest on domestic and foreign debts .
22 This is not the case for persons in receipt of Supplementary Benefit .
23 In effect it is merely to restate the fact that the intuitions that sustain the case for individualism in explanation are largely our intuitions .
24 The 1990s saw Home Office ministers and the Lord Chief Justice apparently working together to press the case for restraint in the use of custody .
25 ‘ But then that 's the case for women in most jobs . ’
26 While such theory may indicate that local voters should be made aware of costs , the case for differences in spending patterns and in standards of services is rooted in the reduction in welfare losses indicated by the decentralization theorem .
27 It should be said at this stage that the case for regulation in any situation is weakened to the extent that the institutions which will themselves be involved are imperfect .
28 The case for efficiency in each case was not made out , and there was a clear prospect , at a time of rising inflation , of large increases in charges for both , especially for water supply , with privately metered arrangements likely to increase the cost to the domestic consumer .
29 The case for co-operation in space is , if anything , even stronger ( see page 111 ) .
30 Dulles continued to develop the case for moderation in language that might almost have been scripted by the British .
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