Example sentences of "to accommodate [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Pensions are usually compared by converting the annual pension paid to an average earner into ecu , using ‘ purchasing power parity ’ to accommodate for the various costs of living in each country .
2 which is why I think a lot of things , places should be able to accommodate for shop owners and reduce their leases while this recession 's on
3 But there is budget in the testing resource budget to be able to accommodate for cover we would then decide how best to handle that .
4 It is difficult to envisage the numbers it would be necessary to accommodate during this period , however I would estimate a rough requirement to accommodate 30 to 40 staff , although this would have to be kept under review in the light of the public 's response and changes required to known data .
5 Moreover , popular schools would seldom be able to accommodate as pupils the children of all parents who wanted to send them there .
6 Two 's company , three 's a crowd , but when you 're talking about this generalized and more desexualized supplemented narcissistic libido to do with ego , then of course three is not a crowd in fact three erm is , is , er is the is er just as easy to accommodate as three thousand or three million , because it 's , it can be channelled into the group .
7 It has had to accommodate with changes brought about by television and radio : television and radio deliver news instantly and usually with sound and/or visual images .
8 We need to be as small a party as possible in order to accommodate in one house , one holiday house we shall rent , all of us and members of our respective families , do you see ? ’
9 Adoption workers need to accommodate in their thinking and practice more than one concept simultaneously , that is , the achievement of ‘ open ’ adoption or adoption with contact where it is in a child 's interests but within a framework of legal security .
10 One of the reasons for this is that John Lee 's history and musical bent is just too weird to accommodate in their stories and theories .
11 He points out that processes of this type are difficult to accommodate within orthodox economics because they are not amenable to ‘ costing ’ in the standard economic sense .
12 In short , we may conclude that there is no need to suppose that industrial co-operatives in particular can not become large , or even very large , and remain successful businesses and authentic co-operatives but that the need to accommodate within them satisfactory constituencies may well affect their structure .
13 Events such as the extension of the franchise , the seizure of power by working-class parties , the fractionated and conflictual basis of state institutions , the crucial mediating role played by state bureaucracy , the higher material and social benefits granted to the working class and , perhaps most importantly , the fact that the forms of political representation and state intervention in different countries have shown remarkable dissimilarities over time and space , have all been difficult to accommodate within Marx 's and Engels 's original formulation about the nature of power in capitalist societies .
14 The significant main effect of junction type for both descriptions and potential risks is difficult to accommodate within this framework .
15 So that I think the situation affecting the Greater York area is that there wis there is a requirement to accommodate within the ring part of the needs of the city , and on our best estimate that er I apologize for the word overspill , but it it is descriptive , is of the order of three thousand three hundred dwellings to be accommodated in the ring which after the needs of York .
16 The Conservative government 's principal objective is to allow market forces to operate and enable popular schools to expand to their full capacity i.e. to the numbers they were built to accommodate before falling rolls .
17 This pattern of findings would appear to be impossible to accommodate from the viewpoint of phenomenology .
18 As in the case of the UK , the Netherlands must plan well ahead how to accommodate to the loss of its ephemeral hydrocarbon bonanza .
19 II adjusted its unproductive consumption and accumulation of surplus-value to accommodate to this pattern .
20 The techs ' eyes would take far longer than any Wolverine 's to accommodate to the profound gloom .
21 Not only then is subcontracting widely practised but the small firms are so dependent on a limited range of buyers that they have little alternative but to accommodate to tight kanban schedules .
22 Meeting the need is very much the rationale for the creation of the English commercial court , which has consciously tried to accommodate to the needs of the City of London , especially in international insurance and shipping .
23 By and large , the academic community seems content simply to accommodate to the instrumental needs of post-industrial society .
24 PNP staff attending these courses complained of being told what to do but not how to do it , and of receiving dismissive or baffled responses to their anxieties about coping with colleagues who were reluctant or unable to accommodate to new ways of working .
25 Similarly , some heads sought to accommodate to their ‘ core ’ philosophy ideas and concerns from other sources — their reading , their membership of award-bearing courses , their out-of-school reference and membership groups , their professional and social networks .
26 Before starting the study , pressures were recorded for 30 minutes to check the correct functioning of the recording system and to allow the subjects to accommodate to the catheters .
27 For example , Trudgill ( 1986 : 18 ) draws attention to the reluctance of North of England speakers , for whom a long /a : / in dance is part of the Southern stereotype , to accommodate to this vowel , even though it is one that already exists in their system in words like half and dark .
28 At the same time , British-born speakers will use Creole rarely , and when they do , it is not primarily to accommodate to other speakers using Creole , as we shall see .
29 In talk directed towards specific participants , such as Brenda 's father and her brother , Brenda tends to accommodate to the addressee 's preferred variety .
30 Rather , speakers are seen as modifying their behaviour to accommodate to group norms , where both the group and the norms themselves are as perceived by the speaker .
  Next page