Example sentences of "[adv prt] for [art] [noun] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Then I let her warble on for a while about the trials of high office , and feign interest in titbits of gossip from the upper echelons .
2 As soon as I was clear of the entrance to the voe , I let the boat steer herself while I put the kettle on for a cuppa after a modest breakfast of bread and cheese .
3 The management of the large Alhambra Theatre agreed to put this on for a week as a curtain-raiser to a horror film starring Boris Karloff .
4 This output is in turn fed to a monostable made up from NAND gates IC4c , IC4d which is turned on for a period of a few milliseconds determined by the values of resistor R17 and capacitor C4 .
5 It was thanks to them that he learned that the hunt was on for a leak on the Washington embassy wartime staff which could only have been Maclean .
6 He went hunting in Grasmere , and often stayed on for a party in the evening after a hunt .
7 The father was on for the whole of the second act of The Hooded Owl , and never had that part of the play passed as slowly as it did that evening .
8 Eight cars were illuminated , including car 3 of 1885 ( see p. 37 ) , and the lights were kept on for the rest of the season to enhance the scene .
9 St Albans held on for the rest of the match to win 2–1 and take the ladies ' title for the second time and make up for four previous final defeats by Mutineers .
10 It rumbled on for the rest of the week .
11 There seemed only one answer , for India had seldom boasted fast bowlers of sufficient quality to operate much beyond the first half-dozen shine-removing overs before the spinners came on for the rest of the innings .
12 When the school closed , they kept the animals on for the toddlers in the local playgroups .
13 Right , the search is on for the person in the team who told me that Larry Adler 's birthday was today , and not February the tenth .
14 yes it 'd been about well on for the end of the war she got married .
15 Then anti-climax , as they watched its tail-lights in the pitchy dark , lights that seemed to throb and waver in their seared sight before they blazed redly when the brakes went on for the corner by the sailing club slipway .
16 Once more the search is on for the woman with the most beautiful hair — could it be you ?
17 One joke had a candidate for the Waffen-SS being asked at the muster whether he was willing to sign on for the duration of the war ; to which , he replied : ‘ No , at first only for twelve years . ’
18 The High Sheriff of Cornwall , Sir John Trelawney , opened an ornamental gate with a silver key and a free tea was laid on for the children of the surrounding parishes .
19 It 's not like us nipping down for a pint with the vicar ! ’
20 Cook breast side down for a quarter of the cooking time .
21 ‘ I 'll be back in an hour to take you down for a tour of the lodge and to meet Mrs Foster .
22 Then we sat down for a rest under a hedge , and Dana asked that typically American question : ‘ Do you want to talk about it ? ’
23 We are able to stand down for a while in the evening to get some sleep , write letters , play darts or watch TV .
24 Dosh — I was pretty sure it was Dosh — and I danced some and she finished off the Kümmel , which meant we then had to sit down for a while near the window , where some scatter cushions had been laid .
25 They sat down for a meal with the missionaries , fully appreciating the significance of their actions .
26 Lower bruised his left leg and was stood down for the rest of the afternoon by the course doctors .
27 BBC closed down for the rest of the day , except for news . ’
28 At many subsequent meetings there are regulations laid down for the conduct of the Pacquet , and a committee appointed to see that they were conformed to .
29 At many subsequent meetings there are regulations laid down for the conduct of the Pacquet , and a committee appointed to see that they were conformed to .
30 Hankin added : ‘ We received a biggish bid for a youngster , but I turned it down for the benefit of the future of Darlington . ’
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