Example sentences of "the [noun] for [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Most of the income for Church of England parishes comes from the Church Commissioners . |
2 | An education service is provided by the park for use by the many thousands of school children who visit the park each year . |
3 | Ring the Park for details of these events . |
4 | Inclusion in group activities is important as is , particularly , the opportunity for friends to be in the home of the bereaved person not just for ‘ heavy conversation ’ but also for social exchange . |
5 | The restoration of the warehouse and the adjoining 457m ( 500yd ) length of canal is viewed with enthusiasm by the Wey and Arun Canal Trust , a society which has worked since the early 1970s for the complete restoration of the Arun Navigation and the Wey and Arun Junction Canal between Pallingham and the River Wey , and which has restored the opportunity for navigation to several stretches of these waterways . |
6 | Whether or not patronage is used in a party political manner , the non-departmental sector nevertheless ‘ affords the opportunity for government by co-option rather than by election or by merit appointment ’ ( Hood , 1978 , p. 41 ) . |
7 | Also for creative arts , a weekly period of music and art would be insufficient ; rather , a rotational arrangement should be employed which allowed pupils to spend more time on music , say , for part of two years , with the opportunity for work in art and perhaps drama at other times ' . |
8 | It provides the opportunity for researchers from different disciplines to present and discuss papers about the methodological perspectives used in existing studies of the framing and impact of the ERA . |
9 | Or it may represent the God-given confusion which represents the opportunity for maturity outside the safe confines of the Garden of Eden . |
10 | Er we would like to see that improved , indeed part of the proposals for er these schemes before us today , we have taken the opportunity for Killinghall of extending that original close in bypass to bypass sections indeed some of the poorest sections of the A sixty one , to the north of Killinghall where we have a very bad accident record , those will be bypassed by the continuation of this scheme north of Killinghall . |
11 | For instance , restriction of the opportunity for reproduction in Drosophila to 3–6-day-old flies for 120 generations resulted in a fall in the late but not the early-life fecundity of females in these ’ r' lines relative to that of females of ’ K' lines where adults of any age could breed . |
12 | The distinction between real and apparent achievement , if only it can be concealed from the teacher , and suitably managed by a child , provides the opportunity for rewards to be received just as well for cheating as for genuine achievement . |
13 | Although the precise management arrangements for each type of contract will differ , the contracting procedure will incorporate several key steps , many of which offer the opportunity for assessment of efficiency . |
14 | Built round a consortium approach the MBA facilitates the opportunity for interaction between managers from the I.T function and from elsewhere in the organisation as well as with their counterparts in other organisations . |
15 | A variety of spaces from open to enclosed , private to public , encourage patients to experience the earth , sky , wind , rain , and sunshine , as well as providing the opportunity for contact with other patients and visitors . |
16 | The School runs a multi-disciplinary seminar series for postgraduates , and provides the opportunity for contact among students from all of the Faculty 's departments . |
17 | It is a necessity because it provides the opportunity for reflection on how well you have carried out various tasks and whether there are better ways of doing things . |
18 | Or will it be so difficult to interpret , so rigid in its framework that there is no room for the teacher to try interesting diversions and take the opportunity for exploration of unmapped territory — even of contributing to the design of the map itself ? |
19 | We have already reduced the opportunity for abuse by our introduction of tape-recorded interviews of suspects by the police . |
20 | It had ‘ provided the opportunity for colleges like Hatfield to serve their apprenticeship and come of age in the academic sense ’ . |
21 | The opportunity for experimentation in comparing , selecting and rejecting terms in the PRECIS consultation was an important feature of the search process . |
22 | ‘ We want to provide the opportunity for change in the viewer , ’ declares George . |
23 | The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction ( 1980 ) ( Cm. 33 ) , the European Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Decisions concerning Custody of Children ( 1980 ) ( Cm. 191 ) and the Family Law Act 1986 all provide the opportunity for steps to be taken to return abducted children anywhere within the world , including between England and Scotland and England and Northern Ireland , but do not permit such a state of affairs to occur within England and Wales . |
24 | Given the creditable support that the Minister has previously given to integrated education in Northern Ireland , will he ensure that provision is made within the citizens charter to develop integrated education and to facilitate the opportunity for children in Northern Ireland to enter such education ? |
25 | Mounting a strong lobby , the National Rifle Association argued that gun control was irrelevant to isolated incidents like that in Killeen and restricted the opportunity for self-defence against armed assailants . |
26 | Not only do patients accept weight gain better when allowed to exercise , but also the programme allows the opportunity for guidance about healthy levels of activity after discharge , |
27 | She argues that it is families who see each other frequently where one finds most practical support being given , because frequent contact affords the opportunity for pressure to be put upon individuals to ‘ keep up their kinship obligations ’ ( Bott , 1957 , p. 133 ) . |
28 | ‘ The new association will provide , for the first time , the opportunity for people from throughout Scotland to find out what is going on elsewhere , ’ she said . |
29 | Although one should not read too much into this , given that the families in the survey had at least one child in primary ( board ) school by definition , and therefore the oldest were sometimes the only ones of an age to be working , it can safely be said that the openings for girls in the printing trade must have been a godsend for low-income families with several children . |
30 | The contingency for attacks on Libya and Iraq are the latest examples of the corruption of the United Nations Charter . |