Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] for the [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 There are now almost a dozen different varieties of these cream cheeses , and the Gervais factory , at Ferrières , absorbs something like 50,000 gallons of milk daily for the demi-sel and other fresh cheeses .
2 The custodian , a member of Jack Barclay 's staff , had taken the car away for the night and it was gleaming spotless in the sunlight .
3 So are nan and granddad totally for the idea and everything and moving now ?
4 Its passage had been delayed by the calling of the December general election , at which Prime Minister Poul Schlüter had sought to strengthen his position by obtaining a mandate both for the budget and for a programme of tax reforms [ see pp. 37868 ; 37924-25 ] .
5 EMMS , beside owning the Nazareth Hospital , is committed to raising funds worldwide for the development and upgrading of the hospital to district status .
6 The planting of the woods above Halling continued into the 19th and early 20th century for woodcutters , as well as producing Bavins etc. for the lime and cement industry , planted young trees .
7 The practical effect of it is to reduce the law 's interest in implying duties largely for the reason that public policy demands that an employee be free to work for whom he chooses .
8 Munro more for the effect than anything else , was in uniform .
9 Staff decorated the banking hall specially for the occasion and ‘ props ’ included a garden patio set , a sun umbrella and a refreshing-looking glass of fruit juice .
10 Mail order selling has advantages both for the customer and the retailer .
11 Zuckerman 's proposal of marriage to Maria in The Counterlife is an indication of its importance , and of the importance of escape both for the tradition and for the unsatisfiable Roth .
12 Much of the office and administrative work both for the conference and for this report was carried out by Falls Community Council for which we are particularly grateful .
13 The prison authorities see this flexibility as the principal benefit both for the deliverer and the candidate and they intend to build on this in future .
14 Now before we move further I 'd like to take this opportunity of expressing on your behalf our thanks to Hugh here for the service that he 's rendered our church to this point in time but particularly as the convenor of the Board of World Mission and Unity .
15 Ta very mooch again for the book & tape ( which I 'm listening to just now & it 's fab . )
16 The developers have already demonstrated their disregard both for the environment and for planning regulations by commencing landscaping and tree-felling operations before the planning application was approved Both the Durham Wildlife Trust and English Nature have expressed concerns regarding the future of this woodland , but have been ignored .
17 As I went out , past the shrouded furniture in the front room ( things made ready these twenty years past for the move that never came ) I noticed a Lowry reproduction hanging over the mantelpiece that had n't been there on my last visit .
18 A quick and clean military victory for the American-led alliance ( or , even less plausibly , a sudden withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait ) would be the best outcome both for the market and for the economy .
19 Notice that empirical evaluation has implications both for the operation and the conceptual evaluation phases of our scheme , as is indicated by the arrows in the diagram on page 32 .
20 It ascertained that centres had formally sought Scottish Education Department and , where applicable , Local Authority approval , and also considered the resource implications both for the Council and for the presenting centres .
21 Choice will have implications both for the timetable and for teaching styles .
22 Brassieres upholstered with foam rubber were produced as beauty aids even for the well-endowed and even for prepubescent girls .
23 Twenty-seven , Canadian enfant terrible who came to London five years ago for the smell and ‘ the dirt , history-dirt ’ .
24 Brentford was also the centre at which the Middlesex Elections were held and some very boisterous hustings took place there for the nomination and election of parliamentary representatives .
25 He raised his own weapon again for the kill and then fell forward on to his face with a knife buried to the hilt between his shoulders .
26 At that time , there was no clear faith in an after-life , and so children represented the future hope both for the nation and for individuals in it .
27 Because its results were not up to expectations Rentokil is paying $2m less for the business than planned .
28 You 're often looking for somewhere , a garage or something off the motorway just for the toilet or a drink
29 ( 3 ) That ( per Lord Mackay of Clashfern L.C. and Lord Griffiths ) on the true construction of section 63 of the Finance Act 1976 the taxpayers were assessable on the extra cost of providing the benefit , and from the point of view of expense incurred it could not be said that its provision involved significant extra cost to the school ; that ( Lord Mackay of Clashfern L.C. dissenting ) reference should be made to Hansard to resolve the ambiguity in section 63 , and that the Parliamentary history disclosed that the Act of 1976 was passed on the basis that the effect of sections 61 and 63 thereof was to assess in-house benefits , and particularly concerning education for teachers ' children , on the marginal costs to the employer and not on a proportion of the total costs incurred in providing the service both for the public and the employee ; and that section 63 should be construed accordingly ( post , pp. 1036C–E , F–G , 1039B , C , G , 1040B , 1042C–D , 1063A , H — 1064A , C , 1067A ) .
30 The ‘ expense incurred in or in connection with ’ the provision of in-house benefits may be either the marginal cost caused by the provision of the benefit in question or a proportion of the total cost incurred in providing the service both for the public and for the employee ( ‘ the average cost ’ ) .
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