Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] they for [art] " in BNC.

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1 Now as I looked at the tree I saw that the great things had been there all the time but I had mistaken them for the background .
2 Well I 've seen 'em for a hundred now actually , a hundred quid .
3 The most important of these points are three in number , and I have expressed them for the sake of clarity in less technical and exact terminology than Halliday uses .
4 If I have to lift them for a match of that importance then I might as well walk out of the job . ’
5 Yeah she said she has to wear them for the television
6 Her duties as parents had been completed , she had prepared them for the future , they could now stand on their own feet , so she let them go .
7 In the life she led it would have been all too easy to succumb to the myriad temptations on offer , but she had seen them for the shallow , worthless things they were , and valued her self-respect too highly to accept dross when she knew she must seek for gold .
8 Swan felt very much at a disadvantage , especially when Amaranth told him that she had promised to go to The Times/Sunday Times party with Charles , who had left them for a moment to have a quick word with Peter Riddell of The Times .
9 You have seized them for no crime at all .
10 He then delivered a heavy hint of the need for reform : ‘ We know the Germans , we 've known them for a long time .
11 We 've known them for a while , they 've been travelling to games solidly for years and are better fans on that score than I 've ever been .
12 We have geared them for the charter market . ’
13 But he has forsaken them for the moment , at least in his current Emmerich show , ‘ Some Very Recent Paintings ’ ( opening 14 January ) .
14 He had to prepare them for the study of Old English ( Anglo-Saxon ) , Middle English ( that is , the language and literature of England from about 1200 until 1450 , including Chaucer ) and all the remaining periods of English literature up to the Victorian period .
15 ‘ Perhaps he 's taken them for a holiday ? ’
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