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

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1 But the drudgery of standing in queues for hours or doing housework is awful .
2 The paper of My ABC is of a very high quality , suitable for crayon or felt tip pen .
3 Tom Drake or Anne Galloway of the Assessment Department will be happy to discuss any aspect of the college 's assumption of responsibility for assessment or to give information on the systems which other centres are adopting .
4 Deforestation , whether to clear the ground for pasture or to produce timber and fuel , was a worry in these parts of the Pyrenees as long ago as the seventeenth century , when the prescient minister Colbert sent an eminent forester from Paris to report on the local resources in wood ; but it is only quite recently that felling and replanting have been properly controlled .
5 Even allowing for the fact that NT has not yet been tuned for speed or reached production release , Brown says there appears to be additional overhead incurred when executing Windows 3.1 applications under NT .
6 for legal services to defend anyone we insure , if proceedings are taken for manslaughter or causing death by reckless driving in connection with any incident which might involve legal liability under this policy .
7 and for legal services to defend anyone we insure if proceedings are taken for manslaughter or causing death by reckless driving .
8 and for legal services to defend anyone we insure if proceedings are taken for manslaughter or causing death by reckless driving .
9 and for legal services to defend anyone we insure if proceedings are taken for manslaughter or causing death by reckless driving .
10 and for legal services to defend anyone we insure if proceedings are taken for manslaughter or causing death by reckless driving .
11 For three centuries , however , an incident of landownership has been effectively the sole right to shoot deer on that land , either for sport or to prevent damage .
12 An expired writ which has not been served creates such a fundamental defect in procedure that the court 's wide powers under Ord 2 , rr1 and 2 to cure non-compliance with the rules will not be exercised to treat it as valid for service or substituted service ( Bernstein v Jackson [ 1982 ] 2 All ER 806 ) .
13 This is a relatively uncommon sight , either for slurry or sludge disposal .
14 The CME hopes to entice more foreign users to its product range and thus enable it to globalise its contract markets without the need for linkages or extending pit trading hours .
15 Items designed for food or drink use will be non-toxic .
16 Some of its measures , such as those involving the sue of farmland for forestry or housing development , have been controversial , but measures to stimulate the growth of small rural businesses have been more generally welcomed in the countryside .
17 by mineralising the compound only as a cometabolite , which means that the microorganisms require some other organic compounds for growth or to induce formation of the enzymes required for degradation of the target compound ; or
18 Mr was well aware because he 'd been told by the plaintiffs solicitors that the plaintiffs received terms for cover or to obtain interest on their costs , the plaintiffs solicitors wrote specifically to Mr enquiring was his offer in , in the sum of forty two thousand pounds , that 's er the possible agreed settlement figure for costs , er if it was inclusive or exclusive of interest erm there were some delay but er Mr wrote back in due course making clear that interest was n't included , I should also say that in Mr er proposed bill of costs he had disallowed interest for a fairly short period in respect of both the plaintiffs bill of costs and the defendants bill of costs and the plaintiffs solicitors do n't appear to have erm taken any point on that , but as I say it , the point as to interest was specifically raised by the plaintiffs solicitors letter and er I 'm quite satisfied on the correspondence that they when it came to the matter were seen , were desires of obtaining interest in respect of their costs .
19 It prescribes the boundaries within which the system can be safely adapted to meet changes in requirements for facilities or work rate .
20 A similar result was avoided in The Lisboa where the clause was so widely drawn as to suggest that even proceedings for execution of the award were prohibited ; as such an interpretation would lead to the clause being null and void by virtue of section 8 of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924 , the Court of Appeal adopted a more limited interpretation under which proceeds for execution or to obtain security , including security by means of a Mareva injunction , were allowed .
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