Example sentences of "[noun pl] [to-vb] for [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Program the sensor pods to search for any sign of ancient habitations within a twelve thousand mile radius of the pole . ’ |
2 | I just come back er ladies and gentlemen to apologize for this morning 's cock up , I mean it was totally inexcusable of me . |
3 | The whips agree to give a certain amount of time for private members ' bills and private members ' motions , but they then encourage all their own backbenchers to ballot for these opportunities . |
4 | The judge will go over the dog using his hands and eyes to look for any faults in conformation , but most of all to ascertain the virtues of the animal . |
5 | The highest earning dealers only take back OTC stock if their client needs the funds to pay for another stock ; or if it is a stock that the directors want back , so allowing the dealers to retrieve in their names , and thus to evade a cut in their own commissions . |
6 | He was going to return in three days ' time , and had invited a large number of ladies and gentlemen to stay for several days . |
7 | Nor has there been sufficiently critical evaluation of programmes to screen for some diseases , he believes . |
8 | Its director , Robin Simpson , said : ‘ It is actually sheer common sense to allow pubs to apply for these certificates . ’ |
9 | These were helping to break down the barriers to access for those companies , such as small scale , under capitalisation , lack of knowledge of quality assurance and shyness in making approaches to the big operators . |
10 | One of the best places to rummage for these antiques is Antarctica . |
11 | Calculate the average and marginal propensities to consume for each income group and comment on the significance of your results for the theories of consumption outlined in this chapter . |
12 | The foregoing illustrates but one way in which the instilling of a belief in the existence of a ‘ god ’ with powers to provide for all human wants without effort on the part of the beneficiary to contribute , can do harm instead of good . |
13 | The Purchaser should rely on the normal contractual measure of damages to compensate for any breach of Warranties — ie the difference between what the Business would have been worth had the warranty been true and what it is actually worth in the light of the breach . |
14 | So what are the Somali people and the relief agencies to do for this country which seems past the point of no return ? |
15 | These have been possible questions to ask for some time . |
16 | Its definitions of femininity as at the same time an artefact and an essence are blatantly incompatible , and its attempts to account for all aspects of subjectivity in terms of fixed gender categories , inadequate . |
17 | There are a number of reasons to account for this conclusion . |
18 | Coun Richmond asked councillors to vote for more talks with the disabled who he felt had been let down by late changes to the scheme . |
19 | The hospital staff have the skills to care for these patients such that after a month or two their behaviour improves and they become suitable for private care . |
20 | It is advisable in these circumstances , and in other such situations where light is particularly important , to fit your curtains outside the reveal and extend the track beyond the sides to allow for this stack back , and in the case of blinds to fit the batten above the reveal . |
21 | Waiting to earn some francs to pay for some soup and some bread . |
22 | The interesting points to note for both papers are that they emerged at a time when the SDP , a party of the middle-ground , was in the ascendant , and that neither moved to the ‘ left ’ , not even the social democratic ‘ left ’ , in the 1987 election . |
23 | In the medical climate of the 1920s , when the possibility of chemotherapy was looked on so unfavourably , mycobacteria were among the least promising organisms to choose for such treatment . |
24 | We anticipate considerable strategic benefits to accrue for both companies as we examine the opportunities available . |
25 | Discounting ratios by large amounts to allow for these factors does not change the nature of the findings , however . |
26 | ‘ The game is about guts and determination and the drive not to lose , and Sarah has the instincts to go for those shots , ’ said Jones . |
27 | New social policy mechanisms to compensate for these changes will need to be developed . |
28 | Thus having Broadlands to use for this purpose made life very much easier . |
29 | Employees also receive a payment of £150 for each dependent child under 18 ( although children aged 16–18 must be in full-time education for employees to qualify for this payment ) . |
30 | If the right hon. Gentleman would only himself address the causes of crime , he would realise that they would certainly not be solved by the suggestion made at the Labour party press conference this morning — that we should empty our prisons to pay for more police . |