Example sentences of "[be] [adv] for [art] [noun] [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 You 've not been on for a while have you ?
2 Two to three tablespoons of tinned tomatoes are enough for a sauce made from 2 lb. of the fresh fruit or for 3 pints of stock .
3 Point-to-point enthusiasts are in for an Easter treat this weekend with two meetings in the area — at Tweseldown on Saturday ( first race 1.30 ) and Hackwood Park , near Basingstoke , on Monday ( first race 2.00 ) .
4 You 'll also find a Slow-set control which will cook a casserole to perfection while you 're out for the day doing something more interesting .
5 A sketch with a few rough dimensions may be enough for a man to trim some timber into a frame for a house .
6 Moreover , it may not be enough for an employer to say " I 'm a wine merchant and my ex-employee is now working as a wine merchant and so I am entitled to enforce an express restriction " .
7 The House of Lords disagreed and it is now the law that it may be enough for the transaction to contain an element of bounty if it is of the kind conferred by the exercise of a special power of appointment .
8 Instead of having to prove substantial fettering of competition , it may now be enough for the Commission to show that competition has already been weakened by the presence of the dominant undertaking and that some further action on its part would impede the maintenance or development of effective competition in ( or in a substantial part of the Common Market .
9 I , I 'm not for a minute suggesting that er th that for the small projects that we do that .
10 Now I 'm not for a mom , I 'm not for a moment suggesting that it 's something that would be picked up on a regular basis , but I think it does mean , as you rightly say , that er , if , if , if such a procedure does arise then I 'm conscious that I 'm in a one off situation , I know there 's at least one of our colleagues on our benches who has this on , with children on a more regular basis .
11 You have to be off for a while to receive that , or straight away .
12 He 'll be there for the England match so keep an eye out for him ( for those who do n't know what he looks like he 's the spitting image of Eric Cantona — this is true , honest ) .
13 It is up for sale and the Chinese have been here for a fortnight having a look around it .
14 The structures are there for the individual to respond to the community and in a helpful way sometimes .
15 While the new policies , in their draft form , arise from analysis and consultation , they are there for the public to assess and comment .
16 There are lots of fluids out there , they are there for the embalmer to increase his expertise and to help him make his cases better , the chemical companies give technical support and do a lot of research into their products .
17 But what lessons are there for the politicians to learn ?
18 A feeling that we were in for an epic grew as we waited on the gendarme to begin a traverse across a snow ledge to the top of the fixed ropes , where the Germans , their clothes white with snow and ice , had set up another abseil .
19 If it were not for the scenes written after his marriage , The Elder Statesman would have been by far the grimmest play he had ever written .
20 The other sonatas — No. 4 was written in Los Angeles in 1948 and the next two have not been published — were often for the composer to play himself .
21 If he had testified the alternatives would have been either for the judge to cross-examine him or for his evidence to remain untested and unchallenged .
22 In particular , it is enough for the police to maintain that ‘ detention without charge is necessary … to obtain evidence by questioning ’ .
23 In the Magistrates ' Court the decision as to verdict and sentence is entirely for the Justices acting on the advice of their Clerk , and of course it is erm true to say that generally speaking Justices will follow the advice of their Clerk , but they do n't have to .
24 Partly because there is less for the court to do , and partly because the court is stricter in deciding whether or not to hear cases , its case-load has declined .
25 It is not for the circumstance to give rise to something or other , but for it to give rise to just the effect .
26 Where the meaning of the statutory words is plain and unambiguous it is not for the judges to invent fancied ambiguities as an excuse for failing to give effect to its plain meaning because they themselves consider that the consequences of doing so would be inexpedient , or even unjust or immoral .
27 Where the meaning of the statutory words is plain and unambiguous it is not for the judges to invent fancied ambiguities as an excuse tor failing to give effect to its plain meaning because they themselves consider that the consequences of doing so would be inexpedient , or even unjust or immoral .
28 It is the law which prevails over every other form of law , and it is not for the court to say that a parliamentary enactment , the highest law in this country , is illegal .
29 The burden of proving such negligence is on the plaintiff ; it is not for the defendant to prove that the fire was accidental .
30 Furthermore , it is not for the duty-bearer to decide what action the duty requires ; some other ( superior ) body , will decide exactly what the body has to do .
  Next page