Example sentences of "[verb] it for the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 We do n't need it for the expansion of our race ; indeed , it 's inimical to orderly civilization .
2 The $420m a year that America has been getting to compensate it for the loss in sales of farm products to Spain and Portugal after they joined the Community was due to run out in 1990 .
3 Persuaded by his own musical studies of the need to educate rather than indoctrinate church musicians , he extended the aims of the College of Church Music , incorporating it for the purpose in 1875 ‘ by special licence under Act of Parliament ’ as Trinity College , London .
4 Dirichlet , appalled by this , grabbed the page from Gauss and treasured it for the rest of his life .
5 For the soul does not easily yield to those who will steal it for the purposes of evil …
6 It is not always possible to deliver a module just at the time a trainee needs it for the purposes of SVQ assessment .
7 His aims are thus established from the outset both to record the evidence he has gathered and to evaluate it for the purposes of determining the truth .
8 But it was as if he had done it for the thrill of it . ’
9 But it was as if he had done it for the thrill of it . ’
10 The other girls , knowing quite well that she had done it for the benefit of one Geoffrey A. Machin , were shocked and admiring , but the convention restrained them from expressing either shock or admiration .
11 They had done it for the joy of creating , without having to look over their shoulder at the censor .
12 ‘ I 'll date it for the day after tomorrow , if that 's OK ? ’
13 I said well in all fairness Paul , you ai n't actually bloody got , I said I do n't do it for the fun of it I said and I do n't like doing it but I see , he just sort of
14 ‘ And I 'd only go out with someone I really liked — I would n't do it for the sake of it .
15 The position is as I have stated and I will repeat it for the benefit of the right hon. Gentleman .
16 Charlotte says she can only bear to recount it for the sake of others who may feel they 're totally alone in their plight .
17 This has been one of the central preoccupations of ethnographic police research , especially that inspired by phenomenology and ethnomethodology , and so apposite is policing to this focus that many theoreticians from within phenomenology and ethnomethodology have used it for the application of their ideas ( Cicourel 1968 ; Pollner 1987 ; Sacks 1972 ; Sudnow 1965 ) .
18 If he did not initially envisage independence for black Africa , it is difficult to believe that he did envisage it for the départements of French Algeria .
19 If , as naïve young hunters , they attacked a brightly coloured prey , bit it and started to chew it , only to discover that it had a foul taste or a poisonous secretion , they would probably remember it for the rest of their lives .
20 Mr Anderton said he was disappointed that he could not afford to keep Vaila , adding that various attempts had been made to interest public and environmental agencies to buy it for the enjoyment of the public .
21 He predicts that , within two years or so , people will be able to buy it for the price of a cheap piano .
22 The thick shaggy coat of the mountain goat prepares it for the rigours of the Rocky Mountains ' winter .
23 The draftsman should therefore consider whether the landlord should have the right to enter the demise for other purposes also ( eg testing the property , taking samples from it or measuring it for the purpose of rent review ) .
24 Information having the necessary quality of confidence which is supplied by one party of a contract to another for the purpose of enabling that other to perform a contract will usually be subject to an obligation of confidence so that the recipient may only use it for the purpose of that contract .
25 What he can do is to say that the legal owner can not in conscience , in equity , make use of his Common Law right for his own benefit ; he must use it for the benefit of the man for whom he holds it in trust .
26 They undertook to do it for the whole of the Caldmore area did they ?
27 Material , otherwise privileged , would be excluded from protection only in what , it is to be hoped , is the very rare case of the crooked solicitor who holds the material intending to use it for the furtherance of a personal criminal purpose .
28 It would not allow it to be enforced against the promisor ; and if property had been transferred , the recipient was treated as holding it for the benefit of the person who had parted with it , and as bound to restore it .
29 Again , a person who acquires property for his own benefit by taking advantage of his position as trustee will be treated as holding it for the benefit of those entitled under the trust .
30 Schrödinger imagined an experiment in which a cat was placed in a sealed box with a sufficient supply of air to last it for the duration of the experiment .
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