Example sentences of "[verb] for themselves the " in BNC.

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1 A delegation from Europe 's largest hotel , the Izmailovo in Moscow , recently visited the Moat House International Hotel , Glasgow , to see for themselves the operating standards of a western hotel .
2 Winston sent out a party of men and women from public life to see for themselves the horrors of Belsen .
3 This has been configured so that visitors to the Museum can see in the cockpit and operate the flying controls to see for themselves the effects of stick on elevators and rudder .
4 LENTA organised parties of business people and senior ILEA personnel to see for themselves the achievements of the Boston Compact .
5 Still others are there to show their sympathy and respect , but also to see for themselves the spectacle of a city 's mass grief …
6 Now they began to see for themselves the amazing interconnected web of life which links the creatures and plants on Denmark Farm , and the critical role which each link plays in maintaining the chain of existence — the working ecological system .
7 They set off from Wyre Mill to see for themselves the finishing touches being put to the weir nearby .
8 The Cubist painters had claimed for themselves the right to move around their subject and incorporate aspects of it not visible from a single point of view , and they bestowed , in theory if not in actual practice , the same liberty on the spectator in relationship to their own work .
9 The home provides a safe and secure place for children to ask their biggest questions about faith and to discover for themselves the love of God in Jesus Christ .
10 By helping teachers understand classroom roles , it enables them to discover for themselves the best ways of fostering co-operative learning .
11 In this way , pupils will have the opportunity to discover for themselves the reasons for their beliefs , values and opinions .
12 It naturally combines with the view that individuals should develop freely to find for themselves the form of the good which they wish to pursue in their life .
13 Lucy Honeychurch 's generation are trying to assert their right to choose for themselves the path of their lives .
14 And the idea was to provide a a place where where hopefully local people could erm identify for themselves the problems that they shared in common .
15 This fact meant that Danzigers had far more opportunity to mull over Nazi propaganda and assess for themselves the extent of the Polish , Communist and Jewish ‘ threats ’ .
16 Or should policy concentrate more on clarifying the goals and outcomes of learning , and on providing the kind of support which will enable schools to identify for themselves the best possible ways of achieving such goals and outcomes ?
17 The Picts could see for themselves the benefits and in doing so , the Romans hoped , would cease their war-like activities and come to heel .
18 For informal workers who genuinely do work for themselves the freedom of being your own boss does not often amount to much amid growing competition and soaring inflation .
19 In his work with teachers , especially through in-service courses , he put them into a " classroom " situation to experience for themselves the materials of art .
20 Employers must therefore now decide for themselves the extent to which their staff need to be trained , having regard to the nature of the work involved .
21 They discovered for themselves the value of taking note of the way pupils write of their school experience ; and by passing unnamed ‘ pupil products ’ around the staff group , they devised a way of cross-checking and standardising the assessment criteria that each was using in grading children 's work .
22 Improvisation of any kind typifies Medau accompaniment — it encourages class members to feel and appreciate for themselves the many-sidedness of movement , and learn through aural perception rather than mere visual mimicry .
23 After the next change in dynasty , Thierry and Philip of Alsace strengthened their shaky claim to the comital position by attaining for themselves the prestige attached to being the outstanding crusaders of their generation .
24 During the final rehearsals for the 1962 Berlin recording of the Ninth , Karajan discovered that for years in the Finale 's ‘ adagio ma non troppo , ma divoto ’ the Berlin violas had been annexing for themselves the top line in a passage that is richly divided .
25 When the parents saw for themselves the improvement in their children , their own prejudices were overcome .
26 As self-governing bodies , local education authorities are , by and large , free to decide for themselves the amount of money they will spend on education .
27 Mr Morrison and his group can play their part by learning for themselves the full complexity of the problem and trying to convey it to Irish-Americans who see Irish unity as the only answer .
28 Thus far , French princes — with the notable exception of the Norman king-duke — had been wary of claiming for themselves the peace-keeping function within their lands .
29 And since the unconscious can be approached most nearly through unmeasurable , unrepeatable events in the analytic situation , psychoanalysts , even more than other psychologists , retain for themselves the power of being the only subjects able to explain subjectivity .
30 This does not necessarily mean that pupils can not distinguish the 2-D from the 3-D shape — they may be using a more familiar name for dual reference — but it probably does mean that they have not formalized for themselves the relationships among the various features of cubes and pyramids .
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