Example sentences of "[pron] [am/are] [adj] [noun] for [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Well I 'm outside waiting for you .
2 You 're wanting stew for her ? ’
3 Whilst most of us , for example , can cope with having the occasional murderous thought about people we love , or work with , there are other people for whom such thoughts constitute a profound assault on their self-worth , and who must , therefore , either suffer that sense of worthlessness or involve themselves in an intense effort to deny or rationalize the thought .
4 All this is not meant as a massive , unqualified slight against the Caribbean family , for there are understandable reasons for its failure , amongst them fractured relationships and the prime necessities of having to feed , clothe and shelter their children .
5 And there are parallel teams for your film work headed by people like Ernst Wild .
6 there are substantial gains for you
7 Golf Magazine , Motorcycle World , Bike , Amateur Gardening — there are specialist magazines for everyone from the rat fancier to the rugby fan .
8 At the opposite end of the spectrum there are elderly people for whom death can become an all too familiar experience as their family and friends of the same age gradually die , leaving them more and more isolated .
9 There are various methods for its manufacture and it can be produced in various forms , chief of which are homopolymers [ propylene alone ] and copolymers with ethylene in which the ethylene constituent can be located either randomly in the polymer chain or in controlled blocks along it .
10 There are various explanations for his reluctance to do so .
11 Its role in oncology is currently under investigation in many centres throughout the world , but even today there are clear indications for its use in the central nervous and musculoskeletal systems .
12 Untreated , there are unpleasant implications for you , for future partners and future babies .
13 To feel this we need to be sure that other people are making similar sacrifices or , if they are not , that there are acceptable grounds for their not doing so .
14 There are considerable difficulties for them , like promotion — ‘ We 'd never get to be archdeacons , because we are n't priests ’ — but there are also pastoral roles they can fill that a man ca n't .
15 I have always believed that there are sensible explanations for everything .
16 whether there are institutional substitutes for them ( eg. contracts ) and how precisely the co-ordinating power of market economies is affected .
17 Protective powers Where people are vulnerable because of the extent of their mental infirmities , severe physical disability , or extreme age , there are statutory responsibilities for their personal care and their financial protection .
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