Example sentences of "[to-vb] it for the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Wo would you like to try it for the next year , or few meetings ? |
2 | Two men climb the rock to check that all has been eaten and to clean it for the next burial . |
3 | It was a new Fender Strat , bought from a shop on Shaftsbury Avenue in February ‘ 62 , and yes , I wish I still had it , but only to sell it for the large sums they fetch now ! |
4 | That product there already either exists or we 're going to do it for the first time for an estate agent |
5 | when they 've got to do the road or something they want somebody to do it for the three weeks or |
6 | But I used it as little as I could , though if the wind stayed in the south-west I thought I 'd probably have to use it for the later part of today 's outing . |
7 | His primary task in the short term would be to mobilize it for the regional elections in March . |
8 | He had resolved to keep it for the whole year , egged on by his father , who had promised him a new bicycle if he succeeded . |
9 | it finishes on the eighteen so I 'll have to book it for the previous Friday so Harry says oh that 's great it 'll be my birthday too . |
10 | The tower soon became part of the landscape , so much so , that Berners donned his artist 's hat to paint it for the local shell guide . |
11 | In fact , a musical dedicated to Elvis is on tour , giving two fans the chance to see it for the FORTIETH time . |
12 | Oh I wo n't be able to get it for the following day . |
13 | They 're liable to confiscate it for the further entertainment of customs officers . ’ |
14 | The employee had conceived the idea for the valve in March 1985 and was able to test it for the first time several months later ; the employer applied for a UK patent in March 1986 ; and three years later the employee applied for compensation . |
15 | Part of the LEATGS grant might for example , be delegated for schools to administer , but they would have to spend it for the specified purpose of in-service training . |
16 | Nevertheless , though the currents of genuine popular opinion are now even more difficult to evaluate than they had been earlier , given the intensified persecution from 1942 onwards of even relatively trivial ‘ offences ’ of criticizing the regime or ‘ subverting ’ the wartime ordinances , every sign points towards the growth in this period of a ‘ silent majority ’ increasingly critical of the Nazi regime — even if the criticism was often only obliquely expressed — and ready to blame it for the mounting miseries of the war . |