Example sentences of "need for [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It was as satisfactory an interview as I have conducted in that , it being entirely non-controversial , question and answer flowed without interruption or the need for retakes ; and in her assessment of Airey Neave both as friend and politician she seemed entirely relaxed .
2 It is difficult to argue against this general philosophy , but there is also a need for specialists .
3 The administration of the business has been rationalised and the need for specialists in a range of disciplines has become apparent .
4 we will do all we can for , well especially at the centre and while , whilst acknowledging the need for it to resource at the schools at this conference the voluntary agencies , parents and even teachers admitted the greater need for specialists at the centre , that is we want more education psychologists , advisors of all sorts and er , therefore supporting options er at ten , one C , small roman one , and small roman three on the agenda , but er that is reluctantly not er not small roman two .
5 They coped well with steady rain making me question the need for overtrousers in milder seasons .
6 ‘ There is a real need for Childline , ’ he explains .
7 With Chantal there had never been any need for pretence .
8 But for now , alone in the farmhouse , there was no need for pretence .
9 This need for evidence arises because the world is inherently uncertain .
10 In the investigation of any claim , the insurer must have in mind the possibility of litigation and , in particular , the need for evidence .
11 Where the report will lead to an investment decision the need for evidence gathering is likely to be critical .
12 When a marriage breaks down , there will be an urgent need for support , both intimate , and social .
13 ‘ Especially in deprived areas , there 's tremendous need for support . ’
14 The minority , in particular the 1540s , also produced a concentration of the more ‘ normal ’ bonds by the magnates , hitherto made for local purposes but now reflecting the need for support in a major political crisis .
15 A conflict may arise between the pressure to prepare young people for independent living , and their continued need for support .
16 The results should be capable of being used formatively and to indicate any particular need for support for the child , or for more specific diagnostic assessment .
17 A much more consistent theme , highly significant for this generation which bore the brunt of the late nineteenth-century attack on community provision for older people , emerges when a parent 's later years are mentioned : how their need for support was met .
18 Richmond bureau has overcome the conflict between the need for support and the interruptions that this entails by formally assigning an experienced advice worker the task of support during the hours that the bureau is open to the public .
19 The inexperienced advice worker thus need no longer feel a burden on colleagues , as the need for support has formally been recognised .
20 There is also likely to be a continuing need for support after alcohol withdrawal has been successfully achieved .
21 One does not get a sense of a strong need for support from parents to children to be reciprocated — certainly not in the short term , and possibly not in the long term either .
22 It means that necessarily there have been variations in people 's need for support from their kin , and in the capacity of kin to provide it .
23 In chapter 3 I shall look more closely at the impact of these demographic patterns on the need for support from relatives .
24 But in reality the amount and type of support which kin give each other varies with the particular historical circumstances within which family relationships are played out , so that looking at patterns of support at different points in time means that one is not comparing like with like in quite significant ways : there is variation both in people 's need for support and in the capacity of relatives to provide it .
25 The variation in people 's need for support , and in the capacity of relatives to provide it , is not simply a matter of demography or the force of economic circumstances .
26 Equally people 's need for support from relatives specifically has to be related to whatever alternative provisions exist at any given time .
27 Abrams believed neighbouring to hang on a dilemma which those who live near to each other have between the need for support in times of crisis and the need for privacy .
28 Yesterday Sudbury chairman Iain Hook said the club 's case was based on the fact the division four clubs had a greater need for support as a result of their geographical locations and inability to attract the same amount of outside backing as top clubs .
29 To participate in this change , the need for support and information had to be recognised firstly within the group of nurses involved who , as the key health care workers , were agents for change .
30 Another difficulty has been that such councils are attuned to providing finance for the creation of specific works , while the need for support in popular music is not at the point of creation , but for help in reaching audiences .
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