Example sentences of "[be] [adj] for any " in BNC.

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31 We would be grateful for any advice on how to achieve this and would also be interested in hearing from other community groups .
32 I believe the present system could be improved and would be grateful for any examples of assessment forms used by practitioners in similar areas .
33 I would be grateful for any advice or specimen copies from other continuing care wards .
34 My report on this tour concluded with the words : ‘ I shall be grateful for any suggestions as to how this Department may co-operate in helping to meet the desperately urgent situation that is about to develop in the Delta villages . ’
35 I would be grateful for any information on previous or proposed studies in this area .
36 I 'd be grateful for any advice , including hardware suggestions suitable for my Packard Bell .
37 I am a second year DipSW student and would be grateful for any information or research on foster carers birth children regarding placement disruption .
38 We would be grateful for any publicity you can give to this event , including photographs .
39 I will be grateful for any information you may have on private home care cooperative .
40 We would also be grateful for any feed-back on the educational materials we produce for supporting the curriculum , either through our volunteer or direct to Head Office .
41 I would be grateful for any information your readers can provide .
42 I would be grateful for any details of artists and value .
43 I AM doing research into the Victorian Temperance Movement in Liverpool and would be grateful for any information concerning characters , events , strategies , minutes , tracts , hand-bills , meeting places etc. , that your readers might be able to provide .
44 If any of Patrick 's family are still around , I would be grateful for any information they can give me .
45 The trainers would be grateful for any feedback about QT Days .
46 I would be grateful for any advice given .
47 Their aim is to give aid to groups of people who are held to be disadvantaged for any reason — because of ethnic origin , sex , sexual preference , age , unemployment or any kind of disability .
48 ‘ Certainly , more volunteer helpers would be very useful , ’ agreed Pat , ‘ I 'm grateful for any help ! ’
49 And I like to think in fifty or a hundred years ' time it will not be possible for any orchestra to play sloppily and claim that it is not possible to do better .
50 Would it be possible for any such unit of paid council employees to negotiate with the local state the demands and needs of the oppressed ?
51 Relief will not be due for any payments made direct to children of the marriage or any previous marriage .
52 To this end , Darwin adduces , most especially , those phenomena that would be anomalous for any exclusive correlation of maturation , fertilization and impressionability with sexual rather than asexual modes of generation .
53 ‘ We very much hope that after the meeting with trading standards officials advice can be given to booksellers as to what wording would now be appropriate for any disclaimer notice for future sales , ’ says BML m.d .
54 Of course , as for any other trait , it may be impossible for any one homozygous genotype to achieve the optimum .
55 ‘ The result is : ( 1 ) That this Act does not necessarily require anything to be done under it which might not be done without causing a nuisance ; ( 2 ) That as to those things which may or may not be under it , there is no evidence on the face of the Act that the legislature supposed it to be impossible for any of them to be done ( if they were done at all ) somewhere and under some circumstances , without creating a nuisance ; and ( 3 ) That the legislature has manifested no intention that any of these optional powers , as to asylums , should be exercised at the expense of , or so as to interfere with , any man 's private rights .
56 Butler herself presented a memorial to the Foreign Secretary , signed by a thousand women and calling for changes in the law , so that ‘ it should be impossible for any young girl to be deprived of her liberty by fraud or force ’ .
57 Nevertheless , it ca n't be easy for any of them .
58 Alice could see that it was not going to be easy for any of them to admit obligation to Jasper , even though he was being correctly impersonal , sitting somewhat to one side of the scene waiting for their approval , the image of a responsible cadre .
59 For instance , low-level objects can be dangerous for any pupil , but are especially so for one with little or no sight .
60 They were sparingly given , and the deed had to be exceptional for any award to be made ; many of the Carnegie Medals were given posthumously .
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