Example sentences of "for [verb] this " in BNC.

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1 There are persuasive reasons for doubting this .
2 There are grounds for doubting this opinion .
3 ‘ Thank you for bringing this to our attention , Miss Connor , ’ Nick said , standing up .
4 Now they also , in the wake of this knowledge is the er awareness that they 're going to be interrogated on this , and they 're also sitting up there thinking ‘ what are we going to say ? ’ and indeed that 's another reason for bringing this whole incident to an end , because in a sense they are cooking up alibis and covering their backs .
5 My only reason for including this story is to record the short but pithy comment of Canada 's leading humorist who , when we had paused to take in the scene , turned to me and said , ‘ I do n't think it 's a bit funny ! ’
6 Sometimes a leaf of the plant subject grows across the reference area — the reason for including this diagnostic .
7 It is a special occasion as it coincides with a lovely Flower Celebration and we have Canon Harney to thank very much for allowing this to happen in our lovely Cathedral .
8 And surely our reasons for allowing this are close to those suggested by the tripartite definition ; he has the right answer , and not by luck .
9 But there are other even more fundamental reasons for allowing this appeal , and they are concerned with the judge 's actions and decisions which led up to his discharge of the jury .
10 I agree with both the judgments that have been given and with the reasons given in those judgments for allowing this appeal .
11 So I 'll just say thank you to the management of the Seraglio for allowing this conference to take place in such pleasant surroundings , and to you ladies for giving up your weekend to be here .
12 She was annoyed with herself for allowing this man to overhear her secret thoughts .
13 And Pilate standing there watching in awe , knowing that he is the one who is guilty for allowing this to happen hating himself for it !
14 Gouzenko had obvious reasons for perpetuating this myth and was always astute enough to embroider his story with whatever facts the listener wanted to hear , eventually becoming so vain that even he did not know what was truth or fiction .
15 The capacity of closeknit networks to exert normative pressure formed a basis for using this speaker variable not only descriptively , but to explore more radically patterns of language maintenance and change .
16 It would be a good idea to develop a formula for using this kind of programme so that you know precisely what kind of item you are looking for and , if you can arrange for a regular supply , you do n't need to spend a lot of time viewing it to work out how you are going to use it .
17 MINIS , at its simplest , represents ‘ an … attempt to collect information about a Department 's activities and to place responsibility for using this information with the Department 's top management , Ministerial and official ’ ( Richards , 1987 , p. 26 ) .
18 However , the rationale for using this paradigm as a way of investigating perceptual units was established by Ladefoged and Broadbent ( 1960 ) who showed that the position of clicks is not reported accurately , because they are heard as displaced from their original position to the boundaries of perceptual units .
19 A second reason for preferring this new version is that the cast , while not composed of better singers , is on the whole better suited , character by character , to the roles .
20 I can not take the credit for inventing this — it has been around for many years .
21 Erm , we have looked again at the programme for building this road .
22 A Curriculum Co-ordinating Committee ( CCC ) was responsible for editing this document to represent the work of each area in a standard format .
23 The B6259 road into Mallerstang from the south leaves the Sedbergh — Hawes road at the Moorcock Inn near Garsdale Head in a setting of bleak moorland , and rises gently , with the railway coming alongside , to Aisgill Moor Cottages , a terrace of humble dwellings built for the workers responsible for maintaining this highest of English railways which here attains its summit at 1169 feet .
24 This would permit an accurate assessment of current purchaser and provider research and development activity , interest , expertise , and capacity and develop a framework for maintaining this .
25 But if we had no independent reason for accepting this conclusion , such as the argument from error provides , we would take it as a point against his theory that it shows we do n't know the most central and obvious things such as that we are not brains in vats , that there is a material world or that the world began more than five minutes ago .
26 The Conservative government of Edward Heath was criticised for accepting this position in 1973 , and in 1974–5 the new Labour government renegotiated British membership .
27 The reason for accepting this approach rather than asking for a ‘ block allocation ’ is simply the conviction that the summation of functional budgets produces a larger and more defensible total .
28 As we have seen , there are good reasons for accepting this proposal .
29 In 1951 , for example , the Boards had been asked by the Minister to cut their spending on rural electrification , and most did so ; the South Western Board , by contrast , pressed on and a few years later were praised by the same Minister for pursuing this uneconomic development .
30 The constable will wheel me , ’ he rapped out ; and Breeze was grateful to him for suggesting this arrangement .
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