Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] for a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ It all seemed to go on for a long time , but it must have been just a few seconds . ’ |
2 | It seemed to go on for a long time . |
3 | To go on for a long time doing better and better exhibitions . |
4 | Colleagues , it 's approximately four twenty five , what I propose to do is to go on for a short period and to take in the resolutions on the , on your erm Maastricht erm and then we 'll have a look at the time , but I think we should be able to get those in within a , a relatively short period of time . |
5 | When he was able to sit down for a brief breather , he received a telephone call from control saying that some twenty young bullocks had got loose on the railway line heading in his direction and would he keep a look out , with the thought that trains and cattle do not mix . |
6 | ‘ The players have to be prepared to put themselves into dangerous positions , to go in for a hard tackle , be brave and take the blows . |
7 | and erm I used to do erm , keep a check on the flying times of the planes cos every forty hours they had to come in for a different check . |
8 | He never wrote entirely admiring reviews : ‘ It 's the essence of a book never to be perfect , ’ he said , ‘ so its writer must expect to come in for a little criticism . ’ |
9 | We used to come in for a fair amount of ribbing and good-natured chaff , and remarks like , Was it a red sky this morning ? |
10 | Sixty miles they used to come over for a good evening at those and maybe two principles |
11 | One reason there is so little change in most traditional bureaucratic organizations , I argue , is that they have conditioned out of people the willingness to stand up for a new idea . |
12 | She looked as if she were about to set off for a provincial cocktail party , an office party of female executives . |
13 | A final technical point on audio versus video recording : it takes no longer to set up for a simple video recording than it does to position a microphone for an audio recording . |
14 | The events that followed have been chronicled by several of those that took part , My fate was similar : we were to listen out for a coded signal from Group at Lyon if we were to proceed to the target . |
15 | Jill returned in the spring of 1974 and was told to look around for a suitable site . |
16 | He 'll be busy , and I 'll have to walk around for a whole hour on my own . |
17 | With automatic professionalism Folly had carried them into the bathroom and begun to hunt around for a suitable container before her mind turned back to the question of who could have sent them . |
18 | She had a neat , methodical mind and it pleased her to hunt around for an odd half-hour or so to fill with planting lettuces or doing the mending . |
19 | His thoughts sway constantly between the desire to go on and the desire to settle down for a relaxed evening with a book in the secure knowledge that he wo n't have to go on . |
20 | He was supposed to turn in for a disciplinary hearing over three weeks ago , but he never did . |
21 | Provided we take enough water with us there 's no reason why we should n't be able to hold out for a considerable time in the banqueting hall , which is in a far better situation for defence … and let me remind you that with every passing day , relief comes nearer … perhaps as much as twenty miles nearer with every day 's march … |
22 | Earlier , he dismissed Labour 's invitation to join its inquiry into electoral reform as a ‘ short-term tactical move ’ and delivered his strongest warning yet to his rivals not to underestimate his party 's determination ‘ at every level ’ to hold out for a clear commitment to proportional representation as its price for a coalition deal . |
23 | This ‘ bad faith ’ operates among the doctors and pharmacists who allow their knowledge and skill to be abused ; among the politicians who wish to see themselves as community benefactors , while knowing full well that they are nothing of the sort ; and even among the poor who are so often critical of the medical ‘ care ’ they receive yet continue to hold out for a medical solution to their social and economic problems . |
24 | If , it appears , you tell a subject to watch out for a certain item in a series of random sights the subject will seldom be able to recall whatever immediately preceded the watched-for item . |
25 | Tell everyone to watch out for a foreign body ? |
26 | A visitor to a public house who is asked to stay on for a private party by the landlord will remain a visitor . |
27 | If you do run into lift , you must assess the situation on each turn , being ready to break off for a normal base leg and approach . |
28 | The car has been written off , which has left them with the prospect of having to pay out for a new vehicle . |
29 | It seemed to ring out for a long time . |
30 | It is not surprising that Dr L regarded the humanities with some contempt , arguing that students go to sign on for a medieval history course in the arts faculty and |