Example sentences of "would [be] for [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 if you 'd actually made a minus there , ignoring capital allowances , you 'd just made a loss of four hundred pounds , then that loss would be for a year of assessment , and in that year of assessment , it could be set against your salary or pensions for that year a as if it was a personal allowance .
2 Estimate how difficult it would be for a compiler to generate efficient code for these three architectures .
3 Going about her daily routine , Wilson was dry-eyed , as she knew Mrs Browning would be for a while yet .
4 What a conquest you have made , McAllister , and think what a triumph it would be for a maid-of-all-work to become a curate 's wife .
5 The byelaws as proposed would be for a dog ban at the toddlers ' play area of the War Memorial Recreation Ground and for the Memorial Recreation Ground excluding the tennis courts and bowling green , the play area at gardens .
6 This sort of placement or residency would be for a period of time , perhaps weeks or months , so there must be a commitment of time as well as purpose on the part of the artist .
7 It would assume presidential powers " until the necessary conditions are provided for the normal functioning of institutions and the constitutional order " , which would be for a period until December 1993 at the latest .
8 I think life is easier for me than it would be for a lot of working women because of the university creche , which enables me to go to work and sort of see my daughter at lunch time , that sort of thing .
9 ‘ If there was selective internment it would be for every section of the community , ’ he said .
10 On the front of the astrolabe there was a thin plate ( the tympan ) on which was engraved a stereographic projection of the lines of altitude and azimuth ( angular distance along the horizon ) as they would be for an observer at a given latitude .
11 The sort of applications which we might wish to make in the future would be for an example that an interim payment be made out of the money in court or that the money be transferred to the public trust office , we do n't know how we should proceed yet , but if we are at liberty to apply generally
12 This stated that full consideration would be given to ‘ any social or other problems that may arise ’ , but that ‘ the general policy would be for the Secretary of State to approve proposals to cease to maintain under-used schools . ’
13 You might think it would be for the prestige , the culture or simply because enough people are interested that all three performances are sold out .
14 In a case where the husband owns the house alone , subject to mortgage , and the wife and new husband decide to buy him out , the most usual procedure would be for the conveyance to the wife and new husband to take place contemporaneously with the redemption of the existing mortgage and the taking of the new mortgage .
15 One answer would be for the judges ruling on applications for chapter 11 to get tough in backing creditors ' claims against the firm .
16 Yet another possibility would be for the law to make the insider account for his profits .
17 Initially it was assumed that the objective would be for the villages to farm on a communal basis .
18 The best thing that could happen now would be for the scheme to be killed by another backbench Tory revolt , like the rebellion which quashed Sir Keith Joseph 's 1985 effort to make student fees income-related .
19 The best thing that could happen now would be for the scheme to be killed by another backbench Tory revolt , like the rebellion which quashed Sir Keith Joseph 's 1985 effort to make student fees income-related .
20 The question of reasonableness would be for the court to decide .
21 The alternative would be for the Court of Appeal to decide all the matters before it .
22 It would be for the court to determine whether or not the accommodation was in fact suitable .
23 If a prosecution were brought it would be for the court to decide what the statements meant .
24 The only other alternative would be for the court to disregard one of the clauses and hold that one party had , by conduct , accepted the other party 's terms and waived its own , including the provision providing that it should not be taken as accepting any other terms .
25 One would be for the council to remove expensive central heating , boilers , bathroom suites etc from vacant properties before thieves do .
26 There would still be the difference between the two sections that , whereas section 5 plainly places the probative burden on the defendant , under section 4 , the defendant would have no more than an evidentiary burden to raise the issue , in which case it would be for the prosecutor to establish that he knew that witnesses were present .
27 At most , therefore , there is in evidential burden on the defendant , and it would be for the prosecutor to establish beyond reasonable doubt that the report was unfair or inaccurate , or that the proceedings were not before a tribunal exercising judicial authority .
28 The prediction would be for the ownership of cars to rise by 52,000 in 2 years , and so total market demand for cars in Panaragua in this period would be about 52,000 ( or slightly more , allowing for old cars being scrapped ) .
29 Another solution would be for the clause to say that disputes of a technical nature which the parties could not agree to refer to the expert should be referred to arbitration ( or litigation ) along with all other non-technical disputes .
30 In that year a senior master and professor of psychology , Eliot Hearst of Indiana University , wrote in a long review article : ‘ About the only way a current computer program could ever win a single game against a master player would be for the master , perhaps in a drunken stupor while playing 50 games simultaneously , to commit some once-in-a-year blunder …
  Next page