Example sentences of "[vb pp] to be [adv prt] for " in BNC.

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1 But Robson is expected to be back for next Saturday 's visit to fourth-placed Chelsea .
2 Lawrence moved for Horne yesterday because his No.1 Steve Pears is expected to be out for a month with a back injury .
3 They ca n't afford to lose time because they 've got to be out for the bairns .
4 I mean they 'd got to be out for er could n't tell you , Christmas or something like that .
5 Yeah oh yeah I did n't work anywhere else in Willenhall at all , and erm but we 'd got to be in for seven o'clock and if erm you were n't in for seven o'clock and sometimes I used to hear the bell began ringing when I got to go around the corner and get into the , but you had to wait a quarter of an hour before they would let you in and that was stopped off your money and my wage was eight and fourpence a week .
6 but a more intricate type of operation , where you 've got to be in for a day , they 're not
7 ‘ Darling , you know very well he 's got to be back for his night round . ’
8 Although Portland ( a Thomson subsidiary ) and Tjaebourg itself seemed to be doing well , in 1985 the British Airways subsidiary Martin Rook was rumoured to be up for disposal , with an uncertain future .
9 ‘ Sailors were the élite , ’ Daniel Farson observes ; ‘ guardsmen were less popular because they were known to be out for the money . ’
10 They should be encouraged to be out for short walks from the second week after they arrive home .
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