Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] for [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I wonder if , even at this late stage , it might be possible to arrange for the loan of an item from your collections for our forthcoming exhibition on John Slezer , of which you may already be aware .
2 While this is a welcome help it does little to compensate for the difference in service provision between the urban and rural areas .
3 He had no idea how long he would have to wait to marry her , but he was prepared to wait for the rest of his life .
4 We 've got the French to thank for the explosion of patterned underthings in the 1980s .
5 The police had been convinced it was a genuine accident that took his life ( and that of his mistress ) but after what she 'd been through , after what she had discovered , Donna could not believe that men willing to kill for the possession of a book had not taken the life of the man she 'd loved .
6 It may be easier to plan for the future in stages and to adapt to one change at a time .
7 WWR would probably pass to another country for chairmanship but it is a move which I suspect British WW racers would be prepared to accept for the benefit of WWR as a whole .
8 I am not prepared to accept for the rest of the country the idea that , from now until the year dot , either everyone will have to struggle across London to get to Waterloo , which is how things will start , or worse , under the new madness that has been conjured up , everyone will have to struggle out to Stratford to catch the connections for the continent .
9 That is , there is an imputed income that might be proxied by the market wage required to buy in the domestic work of the wife or , more appropriately , the necessary compensating variation ( the minimum sum acceptable to compensate for the loss of the services of a non-(market) working wife ) .
10 Such bodies are set up outside government partly so that they can attract skilled personnel who might not be prepared to work for the core of government ; so that they can develop a high level of expertise in the area they are responsible for ; and so that they can develop policy in an atmosphere divorced from direct party political pressures .
11 On the majority view the defendant was actually left free to work for a subsidiary of GUS which was not involved in the mail order business in the United Kingdom even though that would have been in clear breach of the restriction .
12 He was involved in the most important questions of policy — negotiations for the marriage of royal children : Eleanor in 1170 and John in 1173 But in view of Eleanor of Aquitaine 's masterful political activity in later years it seems superfluous to look for a power behind the throne .
13 Partly I bad believed for reasons which were extraneous , and I had used the emotional commitment I had found in this to cover for a lack of genuine commitment .
14 If you are resident in a country and intend to spend the rest of your days there , it could be sensible to opt for a change of domicile .
15 so , it becomes easier to account for the relationship of both of these works to the pavement of room 5 , Great Witcombe ( see section 2.1 , above .
16 ‘ Collectors are very active and are prepared to pay for a painting of a particular breed or artist . ’
17 ‘ Well , ’ Swan ventured , ‘ I might be prepared to pay for a copy of the plans . ’
18 the bank were prepared to pay for the business to be purchase only on condition that the home , that the family home was then sold and the proceeds were given straight to the bank , so with that eighty thousand pounds of equity in the property and the purchase fund for the business was about twenty five thousand pounds .
19 The amount of money that people are prepared to pay for the meal plus the overheads and the establishment .
20 The P/E ratio may be interpreted as the price investors are willing to pay for a unit of earnings .
21 This ratio gives investors a common yardstick to measure the attitude of the market as a whole to all companies regardless of size or industry by reducing the comparison to the simple question ‘ How much is the market willing to pay for a unit of earnings ? ’ .
22 The demand curve DD shows how much consumers are willing to pay for the output of the chemical producer .
23 Nicolo Sabatini still thought she was a woman who supplemented her income through occasional dalliances with men willing to pay for the pleasure of her company .
24 There has been a tendency more recently , however , for deaf people to be wary of consecutive interpreting where they may feel information is added to , or subtracted from , the message ( Allsop and Kyle , 1982 ) , even though for spoken languages it has usually been felt that consecutive interpreting is much more effective and much easier to check for the validity of the interpretation ( Herbert , 1978 ) .
25 Mr Greenspan also said it would be wrong to pay for the war with a tax increase or surcharge .
26 I relate this because some ten years after the conflict , that is to say when the wounds of bereavement had only superficially healed , my father was called into Mr John Silvers 's study to be told that this very same personage — I will call him simply ‘ the General ’ — was due to visit for a number of days to attend a house party , during which my father 's employer hoped to lay the foundations of a lucrative business transaction .
27 Can you please arrange for a cheque to be raised , to be made payable to TESOL for the sum of $62.00 US .
28 Many old people in particular find it impossible to retire for the night without washing up and leaving everything tidy .
29 This information is significant for the teacher as blackboard and wall-mounted work may be difficult or impossible to discriminate for a pupil with poor visual acuity .
30 As noted in pp 30–31 , the life of this committee is not easy to chart for a number of reasons , and this has made it difficult to determine precisely what has been achieved and to what extent this is attributable to the project .
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