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

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1 all too often produce defensive or even hostile reactions : the more so because there is rarely the opportunity for teachers to discuss the points directly with the inspectors .
2 But theft of clients is the norm in the industry , and is rarely the reason for anyone being sacked .
3 Ovulation is interrupted when weight loss or gain is exaggerated in either direction , and dietary advice is rarely the answer for long-term eating disorders .
4 Engagement personnel should have appropriate skills and competence to carry out properly the work for which they are responsible .
5 Well , I will tell you now , Murphy , that as long as you continue to do properly the job for which you are paid I do n't care how much you drink nor shall I tell anyone about it , not anyone .
6 And presumably the reasons for these suspicions and degrees of mistrust lie in history ?
7 Presumably the case for streaming gets stronger as you go higher up in a school ?
8 Presumably the case for streaming gets stronger as you get higher up into a school ?
9 Yes , erm , presumably the training for a technical post in the pollution section will give kind of basic bacteriology , which will be , you know , essential for going over into the food section , erm I mean , what will become .
10 The problem with the International Data Corp figures is that they try to treat Unix workstations as a separate market rather than bundling Unix workstations and Unix servers together , which is presumably the reason for the implied figure for IBM Corp sales of only $558m , where IBM has implied total 1992 RS/6000 business of $2,000m .
11 The US Administration under President Reagan rejected outright the need for a new international economic order or any sweeping changes in international monetary institutions .
12 Where it breaks down and you get a governing body that is split down the middle , where you get staff who tend to who might tend to go in an opposite way to the head teacher , where you get parents who are asked to make difficult decisions as with an opt out ballot , then I think that you have to look very hard at the way that that school is managed and the way that it 's going in the future , because those are the sort of issues that unless you get those right the future for the school can not be as bright as it is for one where they are working as a team .
13 Right the meeting for the various District Councils and the County Council , is it going to take place before the redundancies occur on the first of April ?
14 These difficulties , it is argued , although in part the result of the marginalization of the arts in British education at national level , are also caused by the failure of arts educators to come to terms with the reasonable expectations of those charged with administering INSET at local level and thereby exploit more effectively the support for the arts of those charged with administering education .
15 The inedibility of the early land plants to animals and , apparently , fungi led to the great Coal Measures of the Carboniferous and thus to the fuel of the Industrial Revolution and thence the technology for the destruction of those forests ' successors .
16 During the third round Sam drove the short par-4 10th green and his eagle putt hung on the lip for almost 25 seconds before dropping into the hole .
17 Josie switched on the lights for the department 's makeup mirror , and Lucy winced as the brightness hit her .
18 WITH nearly 20 years of trouble-free driving behind me , I was relatively confident and assured when I switched on the ignition for my first lesson in advanced driving .
19 This is both in respect of the run up to the seventy fifth birthday and also with the increase in responsibility to take on the remit for the development of our work in relation to the European Community , central and Eastern Europe .
20 ‘ We shall carry on the fight for individual airlines in this complaint to the EC , ’ he said .
21 As far as I know , Sainsburys have n't yet taken that decision they 've they 've hung on the brink for more than six months now .
22 In 1988 T.R. Shipping took on the responsibility for the Rheintainer Line Agency in Northern Ireland .
23 They will take on the responsibility for providing stock and glasses , experienced staff and will also obtain the necessary licence for the event .
24 Apart from dealing with the matter of the will if one was made , it may be agreed , if your parent wishes , that he should also take on the responsibility for contacting various persons and organisations : the bank , to arrange for money to be available to her pending the settlement of her husband 's affairs ; her husband 's employer and Trade Union branch secretary , or the secretary of any professional association to which he belonged ; his insurance company ; the Department of Health and Social Security , to obtain forms for claiming the death grant and the widow 's pension ; the Inland Revenue , if her husband was still paying income tax ; the Building Society , the mortgagor ( or landlord if she and her husband lived in rented property ) and any other person or organisation concerned .
25 A consistent feature of unpaid caring , demonstrated by all the available detailed studies , is that once a particular relative has taken on the responsibility for the care of an elderly or handicapped person they get rather limited support , if any , from other relatives or friends .
26 In order to compensate for this the Borough Council took on the responsibility for payment of the Parish Clerk 's salary and the maintenance of parish playing fields .
27 I took on the management for Scullion and it was not an enjoyable experience .
28 Palm have taken on the franchise for Dagger kayaks .
29 ‘ You plug it in when you go away and it switches on the light for you at the same time every evening , and switches it off too .
30 Thus evidence was taken on the need for the bill and why it was proposed to deal with problems in a particular way .
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