Example sentences of "[conj] [vb mod] [verb] for [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | FENDER Stratocaster , 1969 , refinished red , rosewood neck , no trem , £550 or may swap for good acoustic . |
2 | Mr Brazauskas , First Secretary of the republic 's party , said all political forces and ethnic groups should agree on a consensus that would fight for this goal , as well as social justice , human rights , and democracy . |
3 | Some of my colleagues will regard this gesture on the part of the Board with pleasure that will make for whole-hearted co-operation on their part . |
4 | By far the most controversial view comes from County NatWest which thinks that ‘ confusion will arise , particularly in the eyes of uninformed investors ’ , due to the ‘ plethora of different performance numbers ’ that will emerge for each company . |
5 | Just to make sure the new world order is not left out either , a new scheme is launched this year that will focus for one month on a city in Central or Eastern Europe ( this year Graz , next year Budapest ) . |
6 | • To have a mind-set that will strive for continual improvement in editorial quality . |
7 | You 'll find whether it be anything with safety , hygiene or security and fraud , there will always be quite rightly a pressure group or an interest group that will push for that rule or regulation . |
8 | The aim of the research is to develop a scientific theory of the processes involved in face and person recognition that can account for normal performance , and will help in understanding the different types of difficulty in recognising faces experienced by patients who have had strokes . |
9 | Features of language that interest theoretical ( academic ) linguists include linguistic competence ( the way in which people decide whether a sentence is grammatical or not ) , language universals ( grammatical principles that apply to all natural languages ) and in finding the simplest , computationally most restricted theory that can account for natural language . |
10 | Such property is identical to the person and may stand for that person in his or her absence . |
11 | However , he added : ‘ We think it is high time the French government took responsibility for their citizens and should pay for this kind of damage . ’ |
12 | Amongst the villagers , the division on Friday night was between the men , who had been in the pub and could vouch for each other , and the wives , who had been watching telly at home and could n't , but who seemed knowledgeable , when pressed , about a number of ITV programmes . |
13 | ‘ A planning approval on this six-acre site would enable the existing 110 jobs to be safeguarded , an extra 70 jobs to be created , and would allow for further expansion in the future . ’ |
14 | Small rabbits passed through the nets and would escape for another day . |
15 | General practices will control funds for all health care except tertiary care and contingencies and will contract for secondary care services through a partnership between management and the general practice executive committee . |
16 | Our own expert Mandy Johnson has been telling you the wisdom of physiotherapy for many , many months and will continue for some time to come . |
17 | These powers are very crafty and will look for any opportunity to get at us . |
18 | They will not move out of the tradition in manner or moral , but will only marry higher education and will search for some way to use it . |
19 | higher than the plans for the current year and will provide for further expansion in health services . |
20 | And there is debate and notable disagreement about the consequences that elections not only do have but should have for public policy . |
21 | At dinner a military band played ; the governor 's wife was ‘ a very agreeable woman , with an uncommonly mild and sweet tone of voice ’ , and the governor told Johnson and Boswell that ‘ the Arabs could live for five days without victuals , and subsist for three weeks on nothing else but the blood of their camels , who could lose so much of it as would suffice for that time , without being exhausted . ’ |