Example sentences of "[pers pn] be heading for [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Normally , you will be able to agree to disagree when necessary , but if conflicting attitudes spill over into lasting antagonism , then you are heading for trouble .
2 The presence of a full moon in your opposite sign this week means you 're heading for conflict with your loved ones .
3 If you 're heading for Festival Country and the refined pleasure of Shakespeare and Shaw , head South-West and you 'll be there in 3 hours at most .
4 It was , without question , the coldest morning of the on-coming winter ; bracing if you were heading for home or office , but verging on bitter if your bedroom was an alley or a doorway .
5 Because she 's heading for trouble .
6 Day four started early — 5am — as we were heading for Galilee .
7 Sadly , the momentum gathered in the early days of my crusade had fizzled out by April , when it became obvious we were heading for Division One .
8 ‘ Come on , it 's high time we were heading for home ourselves .
9 Premier John Major 's hopes of a victory are on a knife-edge , with Tory rebels claiming they are heading for triumph .
10 Rebels say they are heading for victory
11 One Bangkok stockbroker says that ‘ when people make investments because they want to see their name on a school in their home village , they are heading for trouble . ’
12 Riding bicycles on sidewalks and narrow paths together , ringing bicycle bells and braking at people 's feet like wild bulls charging anybody , they 're heading for trouble . "
13 JOHN Major survived the challenge to topple him from Downing Street last night but one leading minister revealed the Government had believed it was heading for defeat .
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