Example sentences of "[adv] [adv prt] for [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Come on in for a cup of tea … " |
2 | So he was only in for a couple of days then ? |
3 | Finding decent practice facilities was a constant headache , leading to some crazy situations ; in St Vincent , for example , Ken Barrington , the assistant manager , hunted all over for a place for Boycott to practise , and eventually found a piece of flat ground near the airport which had ducks waddling around and a donkey at long leg . |
4 | Powerful , yet emotive , and sometimes melodramatic , The Power of One goes all out for the heartstrings with the weight of justice and the inevitability of history on its side . |
5 | ‘ We had to remove one set which was already up for a production by the church 's own drama group . |
6 | Now power and ownership have drifted ever further offshore , and walkers and birdwatchers just up for the day from Clydeside can find themselves fenced out of the moor by the multinational grouse-shooting and deer-stalking syndicates . |
7 | Wendy Watson hit 153 not out for the tourists against NZ 's Under-23 XI at Napier . |
8 | In the wide centre space , where one box alone stood along one wall , there was a comfortable chair for the redoubtable Ms Brown , along with a table , equipment lockers , a refrigerator and a heavy plastic water tank with a tap low down for the filling of buckets . |
9 | She was in her office all Tuesday afternoon and went straight off for a couple of days on some residential course . ’ |
10 | I woke as usual at half past six , and went straight out for a run in the park , like I do every morning , with LCpl Smith who has the bunk next to mine . |
11 | Chimney sweeps are few , and are not always willing to come so far out for a couple of chimneys . |
12 | yes it 'd been about well on for the end of the war she got married . |
13 | At the secondary level we are certainly in for a decade of reform . |