Example sentences of "[adv] to pay for [art] " in BNC.

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1 Top-up orders indicate the restaurant is going to have to make do with existing equipment until trade picks up enough to pay for a complete replacement .
2 The original grant of £500 p.a. ( then enough to pay for a part-time secretary ) has been steadily increased to a sum of £20,140 p.a. in 1988 .
3 There were some undertakings still charging only ½d. ( or even , in a few cases , ⅓d. ) per additional kWh to domestic users after the War , and ½d. was not even enough to pay for the coal needed to generate that amount of electricity in the majority of the power stations they were then using , far less to pay the other costs of supply .
4 Nor were the levels of resources available enough to pay for the increased skills needed for the more complex requirements of local administration .
5 Something like that , trying to remember now what it was , sixteen hundred , sixteen hundred that was it and it says your credit limit is sixteen , sixteen , you could spend up to sixteen hundred pounds , whether you got it or not you can spend it , so we said if we 're gon na get this computer because you get these Air Miles out of it , you know , every ten pounds you get an Air Mile , well if he 's getting a computer over a thousand pounds you know with all the paraphernalia that goes with it , well that 's a lot of Air Miles there , well we said we 'll get it through Access , but there is n't , our credit limit on Access is n't enough to pay for the computer , sixteen hundred it 's more than sixteen hundred , in , in the long , once he 's got his printer and God knows what you know , so I phoned them up and he said erm is it possible to adjust the limit upwards ?
6 Newsagent Jeff McKenna who runs a shop in Murray Street , Hartlepool , wants local traders and residents to club together to pay for a policeman to patrol their area exclusively .
7 They 've clubbed together to pay for the instalation of two video cameras , which scan the only road into the neighbouring villages of Purton and Halmore .
8 She 's gone down to pay for the , get something out of the boot outside .
9 As George loomed over her , she was planning in her mind when to take the sheets to the launderette , and whether or not to pay for a service wash .
10 In the end , Coleman had to let it pass , although he contrived not to pay for the footage , and duly noted the DEA 's systematic corruption of the media in one of his back-channel reports to Donleavy .
11 In effect these new arrangements are both to pay for the reconstruction of Iraq and Kuwait after the war and to provide a mechanism to redistribute Gulf oil wealth throughout the Middle East and North Africa .
12 He often worked in a friend 's studio , and took his meals at Rosalie 's where he peeled potatoes or washed up to pay for the meals .
13 BURIAL costs in Middlesbrough are going up to pay for the installation of cameras in flats overlooking cemeteries .
14 In essence , Labour is proposing the Swedish model in which the state controls the economy — rather than owning it — and taxes it ferociously to pay for a ballooning public sector .
15 Yes , the money still finds its way out to pay for the cloth . ’
16 They work out how much money to feed back to pay for the inputs for the next year , and the remainder is profit .
17 Retailers were confident that they could trust such customers implicitly to pay for the goods they took away or had delivered .
18 And Singh ( 1977 ) , who has been an important protagonist in the debate over deindustrialization , defines it in terms of the economy 's ability to sell enough of its products abroad to pay for the nation 's import requirements , and to do these things while maintaining ‘ socially acceptable levels of output , employment and the exchange rate ’ ( p. 125 ) .
19 The president still has to make a host of key decisions : how generous to make the benefits ; how to pay for the changes ; how much freedom to give the states and , above all , how to sell the package .
20 The council meeting on that day tackled the question of how to pay for the coronation and the longer-term problem of household expenses .
21 The council meeting on that day tackled the question of how to pay for the coronation and the longer-term problem of household expenses .
22 The Spring Budget only decides on taxes how to pay for the spending .
23 The British public was not prepared either to pay for the higher cost of the non-marketed sector through higher taxation rates .
24 And topped up again to pay for the repair of the flat roof over the kitchen , and the man who had done the work should have been prosecuted for fraud .
25 Then in 1991 VAT was raised again to pay for the reduction in community charge .
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