Example sentences of "for many " in BNC.

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1 UK Director and organiser of the Conference , Peter Johnson , said , ‘ For many , the day provided a reaffirmation of the vision for ACET and a marvellous sense of unity .
2 For many a stay in hospital is in appropriate but they are often too weak or ill to care for themselves properly .
3 For many families in Scotland , homecare plays a big part in alleviating some of the huge problems the face .
4 But for many people , the slide into drug use has been to escape other problems — poor living conditions , no real job prospects and broken relationships at home which all lead to feelings of hopelessness and despair .
5 The fining of airlines plus the fact that the nationals of many refugee-producing countries now need visas to travel to this country , has made it extremely difficult for many people wishing to apply for asylum , to reach the UK .
6 For many people attempting to escape from state persecution , it is impossible to apply for a passport to the very authorities who are inflicting the persecution .
7 Mixed exhibitions are ideal for spotting talent ahead of the market , as well as being a significant source of income for many artists .
8 It will be the same story for many moons to come .
9 If the tradition still exists today — and it appears that it very much does so — it implies that the United Kingdom does not have for many loyalists a natural character of statehood in the way the Southern state has for catholic nationalists .
10 At the same time , despite the popular support for many of the activities of the provisionals north of the border , there is almost no popular support for terrorist activities against the established government in the South .
11 The ETB has been critical of hotel telephone call charges for many years .
12 Telephone Management Systems customer care director Anne Nunn also speaks for many suppliers when she talks about the imbalance between the knowledge required of hotel staff and the time devoted to training them .
13 For many years caterers could obtain only dried pasta .
14 For many chefs contract catering is a more attractive option than its higher-profile restaurant and hotel cousins .
15 Brum based Brian Travers , producer and director of musical films for many years , and well known saxophonist in the internationally renowned band , UB40 , has already made his mark on the music industry .
16 For many viewers , Television and Sport are inseparable .
17 Central Television 's first series of CHANCER ( 1990 ) was an irresistible item on the television schedule for many millions of viewers .
18 Marrows will store in good condition for many months .
19 Those old , glazed rope-twist tiles seem to be hard to find nowadays , and the ones in the picture will have been in the garden for many years .
20 For many years all British clubs used 1,000 lb weak links which failed on any two-seater launch where the pilot tried to get the maximum height .
21 This method has been taught for many years and I do not think that pilots who have learned to do it this way need bother to change .
22 Since we live at 1g for virtually all of our lives , the feeling of even slightly reduced ‘ g ’ is unusual and , for many people , alarming ( it can be associated with nightmare dreams of falling ) .
23 It 's not unusual for many women to feel depressed a few days after giving birth .
24 At the same time , for many women it can also mark a new beginning .
25 The thing about sex , thought Jay , apart from everything else , is that for a few , for many , for countless seconds and sometimes glorious minutes , you stop thinking .
26 Drovers had pastured their herds here for many years but their customary right had vanished when Flemyng bought the ground and it was a daily vexation of Cameron 's to move the animals out from among his materials and even from inside the unfinished walls .
27 Unquestionably , the loss of his father was felt as a grievous blow for many years after the event .
28 On arriving he missed that female intimacy which had been so important a part of his life for many years .
29 This patient has lost the semantic representations for many words ( the brain 's store of meanings ) , but retains the link between the visual input and speech output lexicons .
30 Since the work of S. S. Stevens in the 1930s and later , it has been recognized that , although the Weber-Fechner Law holds for many sorts of sensory experience , the exponent varies widely ; nevertheless , the principle of a quantitative correlation between external stimulus , neural activity and experienced sensation remains intact and now appears to be well-established .
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