Example sentences of "what [pron] need for " in BNC.

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1 He is just what I needed for my tennis and for my life . ’
2 ‘ This is exactly what I need for my illustrations .
3 Continued to go about opening cupboards , fetching what she needed for making pastry .
4 er Nothing or nobody in England make anything anywhere near to what she needs for her disability .
5 Bring ideas for a room you would like to decorate — full instructions on what you need for this will be sent with your booking form .
6 Whatever direction the hair moves , the shape remains strong and striking — just what you need for blustery weather !
7 just what you need for opening double doors , eh ? ’
8 You know what you need for your dinner .
9 Just take a small bag with what you need for the night and a warm pullover and leave the key to your door with your next-door neighbours . ’
10 And those sturdy thighs of hers are just what you need for a good rumbustious kazatzki .
11 because that 's what you need for overtaking someone .
12 Maybe not having what we crave for is exactly what we need for our development or to give us time and the space to reflect on what we truly want !
13 This is a much slower atmospheric change than lungs , of course , and is suited to the confined and restricted conditions of a ‘ soil atmosphere ’ , which is just what we need for them to breathe in poison .
14 But I I I think you should say a clear and simple statement of what our what we need for the company or person approached is
15 ‘ Single 50p coins and £1 coins in the collection plate are not going to get us anywhere near what we need for the life of today 's Church . ’
16 eh what she needs is what we need for the summer weather Connie , my brother is
17 Location , Sensation , Modalities , Concomitants , That 's what one needs for diagnosis !
18 That 's all the more reason why you should not be cutting their budget below what they need for next year .
19 ‘ Now the way is open to St Bede 's and St Augustine 's parents to get what they need for the good of their children .
20 The romantic element in adventure stones is one of several processes of selection by which a writer takes from his raw material — from real life , if you like — what he needs for his particular fiction .
21 In Wolfenstein 's words ( 1955 ) , ‘ What the baby wants for pleasure has thus become as legitimate a demand as what he needs for his physical well-being , and is to be treated in the same way . ’
22 In 1974 , he decided that none of the developmental systems being studied really gave him what he needed for a study of development .
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