Example sentences of "[verb] for its " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But when the Assembly met for its first session on 5 January 1918 it immediately became clear that a majority of the deputies were hostile to the government and the Assembly was forcibly disbanded .
2 Having been synthesized it has to be transported to the part of the cell in which it is required ; there it will remain for its lifetime of hours , weeks or months until it is due for renewal , when it is pulled out of place in the cell and broken down by enzymes as quickly as it was previously synthesized , its building blocks ( the amino acids ) being recycled in the synthesis of other proteins .
3 The laity , therefore , became reluctant to invest in their local churches , while an impoverished ecclesiastical establishment had few resources to spare for its buildings .
4 Sir Leon said there was no need for the United Kingdom to wait for its inflation rate to reach the European average before joining the exchange rate mechanism , nor to hold back until the further removal of capital and exchange controls next summer .
5 But until manufacturers and club professionals come to realise that a significant number play the game left-handed , the world of golf will just have to wait for its Gower , Seles , McEnroe and White .
6 Real boulevard creation , making what is now the centre of West Berlin , around Kurfürstendamm , had to wait for its beginnings in the 1920s and its maturity under Allied rule in the 1960s .
7 It was sent to the lost-luggage office to wait for its owner .
8 The SPG was , however , highly controversial and widely criticized for its behaviour at demonstrations in particular .
9 The scientific management approach was criticized for its naive preoccupation with financial or extrinsic rewards , and for ignoring intrinsic needs for affiliation , self-esteem and self-actualization .
10 Content analysis is often criticized for its ‘ merely quantitative ’ findings , but its data , while often needing further interpretation , are essential to any developed sociology of culture , not only in modern communications systems , where the large numbers of works make it inevitable , but also in more traditional kinds of work .
11 The study of landscape is one of the oldest sub-disciplines within geography , but during the quantitative revolution of the 1960s and early 1970s such work was roundly criticized for its descriptive nature and its search for uniqueness .
12 Kew was criticized for its fidelity to bedding-out and Latin plant names .
13 Although his regime was credited with having introduced a degree of economic prosperity , it was widely criticized for its disregard for human rights .
14 The HDI was widely criticized for its complexity and for a system of weighting data which gave the United States the lowest HDI of any developed country ( owing to its high illiteracy rate ) .
15 The French government was consequently widely criticized for its presentation late on Jan. 14 of new proposals , of which no inkling was given at the EC ministerial meeting .
16 Although the investigation had resulted in the conviction of 34 individuals and four corporations and secured damages of nearly $32,000,000 , it was increasingly criticized for its slow pace .
17 The theory of the new international division of labour has been criticized for its uncompromising condemnation of TNC operations in the Third World , on the grounds that there is not very much that is new about it and that it relies on an empirical base that is far too limited ( see , for example , Cohen , 1987 , ch.7 ; Jenkins , 1984 ; Gordon , 1988 ) .
18 The Indian government has been strongly criticized for its slow response , but a bill has now been introduced in parliament which should speed up the processing of claims .
19 The NAC " was severely criticized for its policy towards the Abyssinian war .
20 The maths he produced in the six short years before his death in 1920 is treasured for its originality .
21 Second , despite the state 's vast law-enforcement apparatus it appears increasingly incapable of securing and maintaining for its citizens the wholesomeness and amenity of their physical environment , or even the long-term physical well-being of the citizens themselves .
22 They were getting well clear now , even allowing for its unnatural speed .
23 It looks and performs like a pro unit , and even allowing for its reliance on unbalanced connections ( avoid long cables ! ) it 's an all-rounder which amply suits any home or semi-pro studio .
24 These include the incidence of the tax system , the allocation of the benefits from public spending , the dynamic impact of policy ( allowing for its effect on accumulation of capital ) , and the extent of intergenerational redistribution .
25 It is worth seeing for its two marble medallions which show the Annunciation , with the angel on the left and the Virgin Mary on the right , the work of Agostino Busti .
26 The Institute has become the first professional institution to be registered for its headquarters administrative operations under BS 5750 .
27 There has to be a new definition of sexuality : nurtured by everyday physical experience rather than separate from it , revered for its danger yet ribald and jolly , both everyday and sacramental .
28 Eagle argued that Mr Ferriday had arranged for its money to be used to satisfy his obligations under the sub-underwriting arrangements that Savory Milln had entered into in circumstances in which Savory Milln ought to have known or been put on inquiry that the money had been misappropriated from Eagle .
29 and that the learning situation itself needs to be examined for its possible contribution to children 's learning difficulties , instead of merely looking in the child for causes .
30 The basic theme , topic , or specific subject-matter will be selected , and examined for its facets , concepts and possible sub-units as well as for the skills that are necessary for its full comprehension and others that can be usefully practised within its general ambit .
  Next page