Example sentences of "[noun sg] for [art] whole " in BNC.

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1 Since school reports can stand separately from this it is possible to revise present reporting systems in preparation for the whole National Curriculum to come on stream .
2 The real crime of the USSR is to have spoiled an opportunity for the whole world , they have so discredited socialism . ’
3 The window was barred on the outside but this did not seem unreasonable as there was only one thin wall of barbed wire as defence for the whole camp .
4 British and Canadian press responses to the Heysel Stadium tragedy are considered by Young ( 1986 ) , who notes how newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic ran the story for a whole month , dwarfing coverage of the Bangladesh cyclone which resulted in many thousands of deaths .
5 Er it was n't like er you know the employer would meet you and discuss a wage rise for a whole yard .
6 but it 's like you see , he gives them spellings and he puts perhaps three or four wrong in twenty and they 're supposed to come home and check 'em , meanwhile he leaves them on the board for a whole week , which I think I 've told you before
7 The medical profession itself , notably in the Dawson Report of 1920 , advocated some kind of comprehensive health care provision for the whole population .
8 If one assumes the no boundary condition for the universe , we shall see that there must be well-defined thermodynamic and cosmological arrows of time , but they will not point in the same direction for the whole history of the universe .
9 So she rehearsed the triumphs and achievements of the Thatcher Revolution and laid lavish claim to having lit in Britain the torch of freedom for the whole world .
10 After all … 2.000.000.000,00 when you think about it , is … 0,00 compared to the budget for the whole production , which will probably run out about 100.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000,00 . ’
11 The war was the cold , the wet , standing to your neck in a drain for a whole night with bloodhounds on your trail , not knowing how you could manage the next step toward the end of a long march .
12 Do you make distinct sounds for each of the vowels , or do you use pretty well one indeterminate noise for the whole lot ?
13 Sir Denis evinced less enthusiasm for the whole electoral process .
14 Journalists who shared Herr 's enthusiasm for the whole experience , if enthusiasm is the word , tend to quote with wistful nostalgia one particular line from Dispatches : ‘ I think Vietnam was what we had instead of happy childhoods . ’
15 Public statutes are the will of Parliament for the whole country and apply to local authorities of each class alike , whereas private statutes apply to the local authority which obtains from Parliament the private statute .
16 His first novel , Another Roadside Attraction ( 1971 ) , sets up a ludicrous adventure plot in which two ‘ heroes ’ attempt to carry the mummified remains of Jesus ( seized from t base for a whole series of chronological divergences and a parallel plot in which a zoo and hot-dog joint , together , are established as the roadside attraction to the title .
17 Nick Bollettieri , whose Bradenton , Florida Coaching Academy continues to be the base for a whole host of tennis champions , including currently , Andre Agassi , and who is committed to helping the Lawn Tennis Association to set up a similar training base her in the UK , has , in conjunction with adidas , launched a fast and functional range of tennis apparel for this country .
18 The Munn Report examined the structure of the curriculum in the last two years of compulsory schooling in Scotland , and carried out its work almost at the same time as the Dunning Committee considered the aims , purposes and forms of assessment for the whole ability range .
19 As our diagram shows , its most important product is naphtha which is the key feedstock for the whole operation .
20 The pupil 's classroom and working groups ( how an individual 's behaviour may have a function for the whole group who may then try and prevent him from changing it ; how groups may be handled so as not to ‘ need ’ one child 's particular behaviour and instead support his progress )
21 She then pointed to the recipe — Turkish Stuffing for a whole Roast Sheep — delighted by the disparity between the thought of this sheep and the few ounces of meat a week which begun jotting down recipes for this book after she had been sent back to England in 1945 , owing to her health , from New Delhi , where she had been living with her husband .
22 Returning to London , Crawford supplemented his income by working as a waiter at Lyons ' Corner House , in Westminster , showing his athleticism by taking responsibility for a whole floor , a task normally given to four waiters .
23 And the head — above all — needs to take responsibility for the whole programme .
24 By the summer of 1940 , the Central Council for Jewish Refugees was again feeling the pinch , with the result that the government accepted , in principle , the responsibility for the whole cost of maintaining refugees at scales to be agreed and seventy-five per cent of the cost of administration .
25 It is ‘ joint and several ’ : anybody involved may have responsibility for the whole site , however slight the involvement .
26 The team as a whole was given the responsibility for the whole task and for assigning individuals to particular jobs .
27 Within corpora , compounds are tagged with a single tag for the whole compound allowing a set of compounds to be easily extracted .
28 The third either points to the index for the whole compound or is a dead end .
29 ‘ When I grow up I 'll make sure I 've always got enough money for a whole pound of sausages and eggs to go with them , ’ Sally thought , but she never said anything .
30 In order to make available a single comprehensive Report covering the English curriculum for the whole period of compulsory schooling , we have included in this Report material from our first Report — revised and extended to reflect the needs of the secondary curriculum or to present our arguments more clearly .
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