Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] [verb] [adv prt] for [art] " in BNC.

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1 So I went in for a scholarship with the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts .
2 There were only thirty visitors over the weekend Only one signing up for an organically grown allotment.It seems the message has n't yet taken root with the general public .
3 So we set off for a last look round .
4 So we came about for the last time , since we were now south of the entrance , and motorsailed north , a little further off , to give the rock a good clearance .
5 Perhaps he popped out for a quick sandwich while Nigel read ?
6 He was too restless to sleep any more so he went out for a walk .
7 And so it went on for a few more minutes and then Anna returned , bearing a red packet labelled " Marlboro " .
8 And so it went on for the first 14 years of their friendship .
9 In the morning providentially we set off for the frontier , and there to my great delight I saw the familiar face of Mr Derrick Robinson , Rhodesia 's Assistant Commissioner of Police , standing beside a BMW motor car which was to convey me to Salisbury .
10 ‘ Are n't you going in for the Swimming Gala ? ’
11 Wo n't you come in for a minute ?
12 why do n't you save up for the Sony compact jobs ?
13 why do n't you shut up for a moment
14 Then I wandered around for a while , casting wistful glances at my tables .
15 Sometimes I drop out for the first verse of songs and let Keith do rhythm and then I come back in for the second verse ; it brings the level of intensity right up .
16 How I got round for the four days of the tournament , I do n't know .
17 Then we went back for the long-service merit awards .
18 If I did manage to get the rubber disc in now , but then he arrived an hour or two late , and then we went out for a romantic candle-lit dinner , and then we chatted for a while … the spermicide would have decided to cease hostilities at just about the time I needed it to be at its most fierce .
19 Hurry up and then we go out for a walk .
20 Then we sat down for a rest under a hedge , and Dana asked that typically American question : ‘ Do you want to talk about it ? ’
21 The cloth for their suits was cord ( corduroy ) , as I 've told you ; but sometimes they went in for a suit of heavy tweed — staple tweed it was called ; and at that time they made it as hard as a board .
22 Sometimes they stand in for a deity , haunting the sacred places and occupying a position midway between gods and men .
23 And then they sent back for the you know the , the ones that had been there before .
24 So it 's two days out in the field with one of our trainers or top people and then they come in for the three day course .
25 The dragon heaved a huge sigh of relief and politely turned his head to let out a huge smoky belch ; then he settled down for a dragon-like snooze .
26 ‘ I guess when I show up for the Majors I 'll be a little more popular .
27 ‘ That 's why I put in for the R.F.C. We 're literally the only sportsmen left . ’
28 Traffic is still slow moving on the M twenty-five , that 's clockwise at junction sixteen , where you turn off for the M forty .
29 Through the Sound of Grunay , ever threading through a procession of rock islets and on to the northernmost island of Unst , where we tied up for the night at the little pier in Baltasound .
30 Instead they look out for the loudmouths in jeans and trainers .
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