Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] set aside for " in BNC.

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1 In the shadow of the gigantic cooling towers of Thorpe Marsh , North Eastern Region 's 1000 MW Coal-fired Power Station , is an exciting area set aside for wildlife .
2 , we er , we , we did some , I mean that was a proper weekend set aside for but I mean they really about practical jokes being played and stuff .
3 Equally , however , the farmer is entitled to demand that the countryside be viewed neither as a more extensive version of an urban recreation ground , nor as an arcadian idyll set aside for the pursuit of an indulgent atavism .
4 Nearby there is an amusement arcade , an attractive boating lake , and a large area set aside for passive recreation which includes a viewing mound providing superb views of the North Wales coastal area .
5 In the little office set aside for him , Wycliffe brooded over the accumulating mound of paper , the expanding case file , and among the rest a preliminary report from Franks on the autopsy .
6 There was nobody who remembered the days of churches where people assembled for religious ceremonies , but they resented the idea of a TOM replacing the function of the antique building set aside for sacred ceremonies .
7 If hundreds of thousands of Mickey Mouse fans choose to celebrate their preference together in a small area set aside for them in the north of France , then the rest of the country can breathe a sigh of relief and head somewhere else .
8 Although a lot of space may not be available , a small area set aside for dining is always useful .
9 As he will be aware , in June the United States Government had a sum of , I think , $21 million which had been earmarked for military aid set aside for the very purposes that the hon. Gentleman suggests .
10 But most students will spend much of their time working in the college library , study centre or some other room set aside for quiet study ( i.e. not the refectory or student union ) .
11 Dig over and weed vacant ground set aside for vegetables , being careful to dig up roots of perennial weeds , such as dock .
12 In front of the railway station , a second police car ( summoned by a confident Morse as Lewis had driven him from North Oxford ) was now waiting , and the Chief Inspector nodded a perfunctory greeting to the two detective-constables who sat side by side in the front seats as they watched , and awaited , developments ; watched the three men walk over to the twenty-minute waiting-area set aside for those meeting passengers from British Rail journeys — an area where parking cost nothing at all ; watched them as they passed through that area and walked into the main car-park , with the bold notice affording innocent trespassers the clearest warning :
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