Example sentences of "[pron] was [adv] [noun] for [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Nevertheless , she had invariably done her best for her child as , indeed , she was now doing for her grandchild .
2 The remaining void shields were doing their best to bleed hostile energies away as heat , but there was n't time for it to radiate away .
3 There was n't room for her to stay in the flat with the three other girls so they decided that Katrine should stay in Piazza Pitti in Debbie 's flat .
4 Well perhaps there was n't room for her sit in the back !
5 And that building there , the one with the green roof , that 's Ebenezer Chapel where we used to have lessons some mornings because there was n't room for us all in the school .
6 Yes , there was probably room for us all .
7 There was scarcely room for one inside the cubicle , let alone two .
8 When I visited Aunt Louise there was just time for us to have a meal in one of the High Street cafés before I caught the bus home .
9 You had to sit up straight and there was barely room for your knees .
10 Though to be honest , there was hardly room for her leg in there .
11 Time was now important to him : it had been a lazy year and , as he had told Levy , there was still work for him to do .
12 There was still food for them to eat and Mrs Rundle was still there .
13 There was only room for one at the top and he was it .
14 Needless to say there was only room for one .
15 But there was always room for one more in the Conspiracy hunt .
16 It was finally time for me to pack up my tent and vanish into the summer afternoon .
17 There had not been a crisis for about six months , though , so it was clearly time for one .
18 Some signal had obviously been given , though Alexandra had not seen it , and now it was plainly time for everyone to turn and talk to their other neighbour .
19 It was nearly time for her to take up position at Ludgate Circus , but first she had to get Ruby to leave .
20 It was surely time for me to take life more seriously .
21 Helen said , ‘ It was n't time for him to be home yet . ’
22 As McLeish had observed to a colleague at the ti me , he 'd have understood the whole performance if the solicitor in question had been going to marry either of them , but there had been no question of that , it was just obfuscation for its own sake .
23 It was now time for him to call in his battlegroup to tell his men of their achievements .
24 It was almost time for her appointment .
25 It was almost time for her mistress 's luncheon , and she went towards the back of the hall to the breakfast parlour , one of the few rooms still in use , to see if Mrs Diggory had as yet laid out the tray .
26 ‘ I meant , it was only lust for you — not that I — ’ It did n't seem to make any more sense this way .
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