Example sentences of "[be] for [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I am for a start . ’
2 Since I , without the benefit of tax relief , am paying as much as I am for the Monarchy , I would like them to do what they have to do in silence .
3 Here in Scotland I 'm old enough to get married without my parent 's permission , and have been for a year .
4 Britain 's Jackie Stewart carried on where Clark left off and , had it not been for a decision to retire early , could have dominated the sport longer than he did , and could well have added to his collection of three world titles .
5 She would have recovered some of her old high spirits if it had not been for a bout of measles and turning more and more to alcohol .
6 Have you ever been for a tour around a busy airport ?
7 During my blue period my life also seemed to become a lot more structured than it had been for a while .
8 them two have not been for a while so they 've crossed off so , you have another
9 then that and he just bring me pack of cards you know er but er that 's how it 's been for a while you know if I thought well being a sh that that 's now we 've done it it 's a pity we 've not got , mind you I mean it can go potty again in a few years .
10 She said she had n't been for a while and erm then she said they did n't really know , they wondered how she was gon na get on in the water .
11 Well the window cleaner 's not been for a while has he ?
12 The Flying Scot would probably have made the move before now — if it had n't been for a pact Laughton made when he left Widnes sixteen months ago .
13 I was just gon na say , some sometimes , I have n't been for a bit mind you , oh , well the last time I went , sometimes I go to Wales to Blaenau Ffestiniog or to congregation
14 That 'll be nice cos we have n't been for a bit have we ?
15 But we had nobody been for a couple of times , now .
16 The 1480s show an average comparable with the 1430s , although this figure is probably depressed by the bad years of 1482 and 1483 in the latter year prices were higher than they had been for a century , and wages did not rise proportionately .
17 It was brought home to Charles for the first time how much of a strain the last weeks must have been for a girl of her age .
18 One afternoon after they had been for a swim together , Sycorax said , as Ariel took her on her back again , grunting for the old woman had grown so much heavier , it seemed , since her immersion , ‘ You are having the red man 's child . ’
19 His damp hair was slicked back as if he 'd recently been for a swim or taken a shower .
20 It had been necessary to handle the appointment rather delicately , as when the post was originally advertised it had been for a boys ' school , 600 strong ; with the anticipated changes this would soon develop into a co-educational establishment of up to 1,000 .
21 But if China really is now backing peace and free elections , the signs are more hopeful than they 've been for a decade .
22 Nader Nadirpur came home late having been for a drive along the Bois de Boulogne to calm his nerves after a particularly bad day .
23 The sky was clearer than it had been for a week , and massive , but hardly elegant , Storskarfjell stood out like a white tent .
24 She had consulted an astrologer once before , even if it had only been for a lark , so why not consult another one now ?
25 These ranged from switching to Highers in non-science subjects when the original intention had been SCE/GCE science to a degree in building and surveying when the original application had been for a place on an access course in science and technology .
26 Just even I 've been for a wee !
27 He was a huge man in his early thirties who had been for a time a heavyweight boxer .
28 Last time it had been for a length of dress material .
29 r er Northampton and then finally I went to Rushden , and er this top one , , and his mate come out of the toilet , been for a smoke , and er walking by I said hey Les , look at this , and I spun the cam round and it went bang and stopped dead .
30 In another study , this time of one village Ringmer in Sussex , which had doubled in size from around 2,000 inhabitants in 1961 to 4,000 in 1971 , Ambrose ( 1974 ) found that the main reason for migration to the village had been for a job , or to be within commuting range of a job , thus confirming that the main reason for migration , as already outlined earlier in this chapter , is economic , but also that the most dominant newcomers are Pahl 's ‘ spiralists ’ .
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