Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] [adv] for [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The other two barmaids , all agog , who would talk about nothing else for the rest of the Gay . |
2 | And the Beau Nash Room might just as well have been their luxury coach : twenty-three of them only for the minute , with Eddie Stratton now being held in custody by the New York Police , distanced by only a few yards , as it happened , from the mortal remains of his former wife ; and with Sam and Vera Kronquist , one of the three married couples originally listed on the tour , still in their room on the second floor of the hotel — Sam watching a mid-morning cartoon on ITV , and Vera , fully dressed , lying back lazily against the pillows of their double bed , reading the previous February 's issue of Country Life . |
3 | I think it might be an excellent idea if you forgot about everything else for a minute and let me hold you . ’ |
4 | First , there is no denying the tragedy of separated Christians , and I for one long for the Church to be one . |
5 | Did he live with me only for the sake of appearances , perhaps ? |
6 | On leaving the castle , the dapper-suited President Havel , more at home in sweater and jeans , stood with everyone else for a rendering of the national anthem . |
7 | I just could n't go and get off with someone just for a joke , I could n't do it . |
8 | ‘ You ca n't really believe I went to bed with you just for a story ? ’ |
9 | , we wo n't be dealing with anybody else for a while , I can tell you . |
10 | He reached for the Caithness paperweight on his desk and fiddled with it absently for a moment . |
11 | Now take that cat to your room and work with it there for the rest of the morning . |
12 | If it will please you To show us so much gentry and goodwill As to expand your time with us awhile For the supply and profit of our hope , Your visitation shall receive such thanks As fits a king 's remembrance . |
13 | So suddenly fatherless , and so abruptly given to a husband , translated from the familiar company of her sisters at Brecon to this barbarous foreign court where she was the last and loneliest of the children , Isabella had looked round her forlornly for an anchorage to which she might ride in safety . |
14 | ‘ Unlike some he is prepared to work hard and is not in it just for the glory . |
15 | What 's more , Bishop is n't in it just for the money , he wants to see some blood spilt — even that of his friends … |
16 | Then , opening them again , she resumed her earlier apologetic furtiveness and , like a nocturnal animal twitching before a predator , begged her sister not to laugh , not to make fun of her , not to comment straight away or say she was an idiot or slap her down , but please , please , to let her have her dream about him just for a night . |
17 | He had come before luncheon , eaten everything put before him with great dedication , looked about him hopefully for the cigar the household did not possess , and then explained abruptly without any preliminaries to Alexandra that she was her aunt 's sole heir . |
18 | I pay tribute to them tonight for the work that they have undertaken in an attempt to keep us aware of what is happening out there . |
19 | The Chairman of the Select Committee on Energy apologised to me earlier for the fact that he has had to leave the Chamber because he is due to make a speech on clean coal technology elsewhere in London . |
20 | Often , they simply can not make the ultimate consumer 's choice , which is to vote with their cash and their feet and go to someone else for the service . |
21 | ‘ I did n't want there to be any half-measures , did n't want to make love to someone just for the sake of it . |
22 | Why do n't you pick on somebody else for a change ? |
23 | Vindictive , yes , but no more than he deserved , and worth the moral cost to herself just for the pleasure of exposing him . |
24 | He greeted her , his eyes falling on her again for an instant and then skittering away . |
25 | Her glance rested on him only for a matter of seconds , yet his face could not have registered more in her mind had she been staring at him for an hour . |
26 | From the age of eight he began at 5 a.m. despite being so small that special pattens had to be made to enable him to reach the machinery , and he bore the scars of the corporal punishment inflicted on him there for the rest of his life . |
27 | Well just talk to us now for a second . |
28 | In every other respect , the manoeuvres will mimic what would happen during World War III , adding a novel experience for anyone out for a drive on Sunday afternoon during a practice run . |
29 | She looked up at me steadily for a moment before she spoke . |
30 | He looked at me quietly for a moment . |