Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [vb -s] [art] [noun sg] for " in BNC.

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1 A score of seven or less suggests the need for a substantial revision of Goal 3 .
2 Secondly , where the offeror expressly or implicitly waives the need for the acceptance to be communicated to him , the acceptance will take effect when the acceptor does whatever act is necessary to indicate his acceptance .
3 According to Forestry Commission pathologist , Brian Greig : " Different sites involve different factors in the mix that eventually spells the end for the trees .
4 But as President Bush puts more goods on the counter for us with his TV spiel about ’ … our culture , our sense of history … rolling green fields , sandy white beaches , red-hot jazz , ’ is he selling caviare to a market that only has an appetite for candy floss ?
5 and if you can have a word with them I 'd be grateful that just lays the foundation for me to talk to them and er and to go and see them .
6 A tell-tale wedge-shaped pattern appears in the multiple boxplots : batches with higher medians tend also to have higher midspreads , a sign that usually indicates the need for transformation .
7 Beardsley and David Platt would provide a very mobile midfield that also has an eye for goals .
8 The Grade II listed building was built by Sir Hugo Meynell in the 1860 's for his wife Emily Charlotte , and it 's this historic and romantic background that really sets the scene for a relaxing break .
9 However , the diversity of the range of information and its potentially extensive scope do require consideration of the methods by which the data may be collected and thereby offers an opportunity for the development of more creative ways of defining and discussing with older people these various areas of their lives .
10 It has survived with the tenacity of life itself , and thereby becomes the justification for the creation of a ‘ god-based ’ religion that would ultimately appeal to all people .
11 To represent a happening as unforeseeable , however — and herein lies the explanation for the use of the infinitive with to — one must necessarily evoke a position before its occurrence : the stretch of time leading up to it must be evoked as containing no prior indication that it was going to occur .
12 It facilitates the development of a sophisticated financial system and thus avoids the need for a pure cash economy , i.e. payment in notes and coin only .
13 Althusser actually says that an ideal explanation would map out the relations between different factors down to and including individuals , and thus outlines a programme for a perfect social theory which would account for the parts played by individuals in social organisation and change .
14 As a first step in closing this gap , the study brings together into coherent order existing data on informal relationships in Britain , and thus provides a context for future research .
15 It maintains the sovereignty claims to the British Antarctic Territory and thus provides the basis for Britain 's prominent place in international decision-making on Antarctica .
16 And you 'll find that this outback area is a far cry from the city 's concrete jungle — and therein lies the reason for its charm . ’
17 In common with other mammalian species , the individual chromosomes of the mouse can be recognized by using a variety of different banding methods but G-banding has found the greatest favour and also provides the basis for the standard idiogram which is illustrated in Figure 4 .
18 IAN WRIGHT should have gone to Sweden with England this summer and now deserves a recall for the friendly in Spain .
19 On the other hand is the car dealer who ‘ clocks ’ the odometer himself and then displays the car for sale .
20 By tending to exclude certain groups from full participation in society , stratification ‘ serves to distribute loyalty unequally in the population ’ and therefore reduces the potential for social solidarity .
21 The Statute of Limitations itself does not affect the right to payment , but only affects the procedure for enforcing it in the event of dispute or refusal to pay .
22 The campaign to save a local arts centre starts innocently enough , but soon becomes the target for intimidation , and Jane finds herself in increasing danger as she uncovers layers of corruption that spread from an Oxford college to the Houses of Parliament .
23 The Department retains its commitment to the development of a broad based training programme which emphasises behavioural aspects but also recognises the need for physical restraint , as a last resort measure , within the context of direct care .
24 In fact , many women feel that tzniut , or modesty , is not only a protection for her which serves as a ‘ hands off ’ signal to men , but also allows a responsibility for her own actions .
25 It is the reasonable foreseeability of harm arising from one 's conduct which in many types of cases not only gives rise to the duty of care to avoid inflicting such harm , but also provides the test for determining whether a person injured by the careless conduct of another falls within the class of persons to whom a duty of care is owed .
26 It has the same services , of sending letters and graphics , but also has the capacity for a visual link-up .
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