Example sentences of "['s] [noun sg] to [art] [noun sg] for " in BNC.

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1 The IBM 7051 Power Network Dataserver is IBM 's response to the need for a high speed file server to work with these new machines , and was developed with Auspex Systems Inc .
2 In the absence of clear words , however , it will not be interpreted as excluding the manufacturer 's liability to the wholesaler for negligence ( i.e. under the principle in Donoghue v. Stevenson , see paragraph 9–04 above ) .
3 In January 1952 Acheson resorted to a vivid analogy as he tried to open Churchill 's mind to the need for new policies .
4 Mrs Large 's escape to the bathroom for ‘ five minutes ’ peace from you lot ’ is sabotaged by her children who gang up to disturb her .
5 Ruling the complaint to be incompetent , he said the procurator-fiscal had not drawn the police 's attention to the need for urgency in serving the necessary papers on Neil .
6 The Elton Committee suggested that there was some doubt about the application of the in loco parentis principle to the disciplining of pupils — for its application would mean that a parent 's request to a school for a particular form of punishment not to be administered to his/her child would have to be granted .
7 Sharp was also appointment to be Canada 's delegate to the IRFB for the next two years .
8 By 1823 , when George IV presented his father 's library to the nation for deposit at the British Museum , the collection comprised 65,000 volumes , 19,000 pamphlets , and the king 's topographical collection of some 50,000 maps and charts .
9 The £230 million package to provide more than 100,000 new opportunities for the long-term unemployed and the , widely expected , go-ahead for joint Government/private sector involvement in the three huge capital projects were also seen as underlining Mr Lamont 's commitment to a Budget for Jobs .
10 It seems that there is one man who helped to carry Saint Winifred 's reliquary to the cart for Ramsey , in all innocence , being asked by a habited brother of the Order .
11 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
12 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
13 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
14 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
15 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
16 We pay £5 for every letter we publish , provided it has not already been accepted or published elsewhere , plus a year 's subscription to the magazine for a Star Letter .
17 It recognises the Office 's contribution to the struggle for the protection of the rights of women , children , ethnic minorities and minority points of view in the broadcast media .
18 It was midway through a Friday afternoon , and Adele Venetz had taken the restaurant 's van to the cash-and-carry for all the last-minute supplies they 'd be needing for Saturday 's party catering job , leaving her sister and Alina to manage the business alone .
19 An interesting feature of the case is the judge 's visit to the nightclub for the purpose of ascertaining the possible relevance of the missing tapes .
20 Barnes ' return to the Kop for the first time in seven months prompted a rapturous welcome worthy of the Messiah himself and every touch , every pin-point pass only served to enhance that adulation .
21 ‘ You were demonstrating in support of the other lecturers ' right to a job for life ? ’
22 Where the Crown Court is dealing with an offender for offences for which he has been committed for sentence under Criminal Justice Act 1967. s.56 , whether they are summary or either way , the Court must observe the limitations which would apply in the magistrates ' court to the sentence for those offences .
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