Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [be] [verb] for the " in BNC.

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1 This method has been used with success in the study of the coinage of archaic and classical Greece , where , for instance , the evidence of several large hoards has enabled a fairly detailed sequence and chronology to be established for the earliest Greek silver coins , made in the fifty years or so before about 475BC .
2 Staughton J. thought there was ‘ a good deal to be said for the argument of agency ’ .
3 There is in theory a good deal to be said for the submission of Professor Birks in his Introduction to the Law of Restitution ( 1985 ) , p. 295 , that a payer should be able to recover payments demanded ultra vires by a public authority on the sole ground that retention of such payment would infringe the principle of ‘ no taxation without Parliament ’ enshrined in the Bill of Rights .
4 After a pleasant lunch with Mr Blackwood , the managing director of the Cambridge Arts Theatre , I joined the rest of the cast in the Green Room to help write a Derek and Clive type ‘ blue ’ review to be performed for the benefit of our admirable crew after tonight 's show .
5 Mr G. Dear , who was at school with Richard , told me : ‘ We learnt more in class from his talking above and beyond the subject matter than from others who stuck to the syllabuses … it was an honour to be selected for the annual school play … ‘
6 It 's an honour to be considered for the B team .
7 Lawyer D then suggested to her that changing the ownership of the house to a tenancy-in-common would enable her half to be secured for the children .
8 It has achieved a good deal of success in this , enabling some compensation to be made for the diminishing pool of potential recruits on the farms .
9 The main activity of the North West region in 1992 was the attempt to convince the Manchester Olympic Bid Committee of the necessity for good design in the infrastructure to be built for the games .
10 The court may require any property transferred as part of the transaction to be vested in the company , release any security given by the company , require ‘ any person ’ to make payments to the administrator or liquidator in respect of benefits received by him from the company , provide for a guarantor whose obligations have been discharged to be under revived obligations , provide for security to be given for the discharge of obligations imposed by the order and for the priority which such security shall have , and provide for the extent to which persons may be able to prove in the winding up .
11 The name of the package to be used for the operation .
12 The version of the package to be used for the operation .
13 The name of the package to be used for the operation .
14 The version of the package to be used for the operation .
15 The name of the package to be used for the operation .
16 This same fraction was previously documented by our group to be required for the efficient expression of the U6-gene ( 12 ) .
17 It was decided that the need for linen to be provided for the patients should be added to the printed forms of admission .
18 The name of the module to be used for the operation .
19 The version of the module to be used for the operation .
20 Back at Wotton-under-Edge in Gloucestershire the Congregational Tabernacle 's Mutual Improvement Society resolved in November 1893 ‘ that the time has now come for an Organ to be obtained for the Tabernacle Services ’ .
21 Section 44 of the Partnership Act makes clear the procedure to be followed for the distribution of assets ; s. 44(a) provides :
22 9 Do you consider any person to be to blame for the accident ?
23 Membership of Equity , then , is no guarantee of employment — it simply gives the member a chance to be considered for the work that is available .
24 The price to be paid for the sub-licences was either agreed at that time or subsequently by letter or telex and the sub-licence was then prepared in Hong Kong and sent to the customer for signature .
25 More positively , Article 100A(4) may be seen as the price to be paid for the acceptance of a system of decision-making which may lead to the enactment of Community legislation in areas still subject to national measures .
26 Thus the more nearly perfect a market is , the stronger is the tendency for the same price to be paid for the same thing at the same time in all parts of the market : but of course if the market is large , allowance must be made for the expense of delivering the goods to different purchasers ; each of whom must be supposed to pay in addition to the market price a special charge on account of delivery .
27 The UK , for instance , now permits copyright works of art to be reproduced for the purposes of advertising their sale .
28 Without any redress to be made for the same . ’
29 It was only the resolute persistence of the dealer Samuel Woodburn who purchased the collection from the artist 's executor in 1834 , together with the support of the collector and academic the Revd Dr Henry Wellesley and the generosity of Lord Eldon that enabled part of the collection to be saved for the nation and for the new University Galleries , Oxford .
30 His Albert gleamed rich gold against the fine cloth of his waistcoat , the fine watch lifted now from its hidden pocket to be scrutinized for the hundredth time , a sure sign that Thomas Grenfell was nervous .
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