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

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1 When you work with people and you communicate you listen to what they say and you make sure you say what you need to say then that trust is there and that trust builds and it fosters trust , and really that 's what we 've got ta be looking for in the work situation .
2 In the October of 1855 Sarah returned to London , just five years after she had left her baby to be cared for in the Foundling Hospital .
3 In discussing Holy Communion , Hooker turned gladly from theories of transubstantiation to remind his readers of the fundamental truth that ‘ The real presence of Christ 's most blessed body and blood is not to be sought for in the Sacrament but in the worthy receiving of the Sacrament .
4 The maximalist interpretation is more promising , and the views to be argued for in the rest of this essay explore and develop it .
5 Second , the notion of a contract carries the implication that medical care is a commodity to be bargained for in the market-place , and only available if the price is right , a notion specifically rejected in England .
6 It was nothing to be sent for by the headmaster .
7 This meant that a decompression stop was not required and that these parameters would be stored in the memory , to be compensated for on the next dive .
8 Project members are normally overseen by a Steering Committee , representing relevant expertise that is not to be looked for within the institution itself .
9 Finally , it seems also to be a taken-for-granted principle that in human affairs where there is order there is something corresponding to a rule to be looked for in the background of the actions which appear as orderly .
10 Where , on the other hand , we have sense-qualification , the property of A is not applied as a property in itself to the entity identified by N ( nor are any referential and perceptual correlates of the intensional property to be looked for in the actual referent , if there is one , corresponding to that entity ) .
11 Few visible signs of such domestic industries remain , but the fine octagonal market house on the village green at Harrold is where work was distributed among the lace-makers , and where they brought the finished lace to be paid for by the employers .
12 Local communities thus had to find more money to fulfil even their admitted obligations under the statute of 1327 , and the regular wearing of military uniform , which began in the 1330s , added to their burden since it too had to be paid for by the community .
13 On the other hand , the detail of the knowledge achieved in the use of the intensive design has to be paid for by the ever-present possibility that the case one chose was not typical .
14 There is no indication how they decided what had to be paid for by the Stent but the total liability was divided amongst 132 quarter lands .
15 There is no indication how they decided what had to be paid for by the Stent but the total liability was divided amongst 132 quarter lands .
16 A system of ‘ National Assistance ’ was to be maintained for all those who fell outside the other benefits to be paid for by the national exchequer .
17 Also consider as an alternative requesting building defects insurance ( premiums to be paid for by the landlord ) such as ten year latent defects insurance — but if not available , or in addition to such deeds etc , the tenant should consider including the clause suggested at clause 2.14 .
18 He was offered counselling to be paid for by the church .
19 As this comment suggests , food is the major item to be paid for within the family 's residual income .
20 The Highways Department has submitted a copy of a drawing which shows the roundabout at the Riccarton Mains Road junction , to be provided for under the AT1 improvement proposals .
21 The Highways Department has submitted a copy of a drawing which shows the roundabout at the Riccarton Mains Road junction , to be provided for under the AT1 improvement proposals .
22 Unravelling such arrangements can often be complicated , and would need to be provided for in the sale and purchase agreement .
23 Only by making our processing needs known can we expect them to be catered for by the computer and data creation industries .
24 The expenditure was to be accounted for by the master in his receipt book and under no circumstances was any officer to receive a gratuity .
25 The public-sector borrowing requirement ( PSBR ) remained high , at 9.5 per cent of GNP in 1990 ; 4.5 per cent of the total PSBR was said to be accounted for by the deficits of inefficient public enterprises .
26 This type of linguistic material is sometimes described as ‘ performance-data ’ and may contain features such as hesitations , slips , and non-standard forms which a linguist like Chomsky ( 1965 ) believed should not have to be accounted for in the grammar of a language .
27 Marxists influenced by Gramsci 's analysis have also often asserted the impact of dominant ideas , but , in their view , acquiescence has been always problematic ; it has to be worked for through the establishment of hegemony and can never be simply taken for granted .
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