Example sentences of "to [be] provided for [pron] " in BNC.

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1 When Mr Heseltine became Defence Secretary in January 1983 a briefing paper on CND had to be provided for him .
2 That line of analysis tends to indicate that when one is interpreting s740(3) and the meaning of the expression " relevant income " ( meaning " income which can directly or indirectly be used for providing a benefit for an individual or for enabling a benefit to be provided for him " ) the taxpayer may be having the benefit of a slightly generous interpretation if the Revenue permit , in any year in which income arises , the amount of the relevant income in that year to be reduced by the amount of expenditure incurred in that year .
3 Relevant income for any year of assessment , in relation to an individual is any income which arises in that year to a person resident or domiciled outside the United Kingdom and which by virtue or in consequence of the transfer or associated operations referred to in the main charging provision — s740 — can directly or indirectly be used for providing a benefit for the individual or for enabling a benefit to be provided for him .
4 Now , as Government Circulars from the hand of Ellen Wilkinson and John Maud insisted , it had to be provided for everybody — and that meant in the new secondary modern schools .
5 It ought never to happen that firms with incompatible ideas as to the sort of service to be provided for their clients should ever come together with a view to merger .
6 ‘ ( 1 ) Every local education authority shall make arrangements for enabling the parent of a child in the area of the authority to express a preference as to the school at which he wishes education to be provided for his child in the exercise of the authority 's functions and to give reasons for his preference .
7 ‘ For the purposes of section 6(3) ( a ) of the Act of 1980 ( which excludes the duty to comply with a parent 's preference as to the school at which education is to be provided for his child if compliance with the preference would prejudice the provision of efficient education or the efficient use of resources ) , no such prejudice shall be taken to arise from the admission to a school in any school year of a number of pupils in any relevant age group which does not exceed [ the number so to be admitted ] .
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