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

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1 If it is any consolation , the whole question of arrangement seems just as much a problem for people with enviably rare and valuable collections as it is for those with hardly enough to call a collection of anything .
2 Getting used to an all-female environment must have been just as much a shock for Eva .
3 Yet the consequences of any significant changes are a matter of the utmost concern to planners and to politicians at all levels , the quantification of the costs and benefits of alternative policy strategies is very much a matter for economists , and the adaptation of societies to massive change is a particular interest to sociologists and others .
4 The ten-year programme represents not so much a strategy for growth ; it is more a guess at the government 's ability to rein in the booming provinces of the southern coast and the Yangtze delta .
5 Rosaline is very much a match for Berowne ; this is her last challenge to him , at a moment in the play when death has blown all comedy away .
6 This is very much a book for specialists .
7 ‘ There 's very much a future for DOS . ’
8 The product range includes equipment for medical uses : eg a vehicle for children with spina bifida and portable kidney machines .
9 The work they 've put in , erm , and obviously , if you give your support to erm , make them a grant , it 's basically a grant for adults .
10 It is basically a call for people , oppressed people , to have more control over their own lives , to shape their world and to use modern resources and technology to do so .
11 If executive-assembly relations are seen as basically a struggle for influence over the policy-making process , what are the weapons available to each side in the struggle ?
12 Data integration is especially a problem for geographers because information synthesis is at the very heart of the discipline .
13 So it is especially a matter for satisfaction that the signatories nevertheless provided a chapter in support of the specified objective .
14 Yes I mean I acknowledge that that is rightly a matter for investigation establishment through the local plan system .
15 His enduring legacy was on the Papworth estate , where he left behind , not merely a reputation for kindness and generosity , but a series of ‘ new model cottages ’ for farm workers which continued to be appreciated several decades after his death .
16 This restoration of the sense of life may well be an effect frequently produced by techniques of making strange , but Shklovsky makes it clear that in the end the object itself is not important , but merely a pretext for art .
17 A Silmarillion on that plan could have ended as merely a pastime for scholars .
18 It should not be assumed that such an argument was merely a cloak for self-interest and greed .
19 Pushed to its limit , the argument implies that content is merely a vehicle for process .
20 It has long been argued by feminist critics that ‘ community care ’ is merely a euphemism for care by the family — which in turn means care by women .
21 In 1912 there had been no such preparation , merely a demand for solidarity which seemed unlikely to succeed .
22 EUROPE must be a Community for people , not merely a Market for business .
23 Not surprisingly , the predominant trend trait is a taste for extrovert , over-the-top dressing , with glittery glam clothes going down a storm for evening , and hyper-smart executive-look suits being snapped up for daytime wear .
24 Middlesbrough Council is to reconsider its decision to turn down a request for help from the Church of the Holy Trinity , North Ormesby , which faces a £41,000 bill for repairs to its Grade II listed clock tower .
25 Middlesbrough Council is to reconsider its decision to turn down a request for help from the Church of the Holy Trinity , North Ormesby , which faces a £41,000 bill for repairs to its Grade II listed clock tower .
26 ‘ Joyce always slowed it down a bit for Americans — takes them a while to tune in y'know . ’
27 Since these problems have the same constraints , we could write down a tableau for LP ( w 1 , … , w p ) having the same basic and non-basic variables ( in the same order ) as any given tableau of VMP .
28 Once these young people became achievers , both in keeping down a job for part of the week , and by acquiring skills relevant to the work , their self-esteem would be enhanced .
29 Who knows ? perhaps a figure for evil or the place of sinfulness and evil .
30 Whether they were poor because they were lame , or lame because they were poor , was perhaps a matter for sociologists , and a few years later , when their dwellings were swept away and replaced by council flats with rents much higher than they could afford , it must be assumed that they disappeared from the face of the earth .
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