Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb pp] for [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Where the defendant has made a voluntary interim payment before proceedings , the plaintiff must still plead the whole of his claim including any special damage for expense paid for by the interim payment . |
2 | During the previous summer , Coleman had acted as technical adviser to the Cypriot Police Force Narcotics Squad ( CPFNS ) and helped train its officers in the use of communications , surveillance and other electronic gear paid for by the United Nations Fund for Drug Abuse Control ( UNFDAC ) . |
3 | If PP is set outside the range allowed for by the selected format , it is taken as 9 . |
4 | For most the only alternative is a flight home paid for by the German government and a DM3,000 ‘ golden handshake ’ they 'll be forced to convert into dong ( at the artificial official rate ) on arrival . |
5 | Two years later the tax was extended to include Nonconformist registrations — a move petitioned for by the Dissenting churches themselves , who welcomed the official sanction of their records . |
6 | A considerable injection of resources will be required to provide the managerial and technological expertise called for in the White Paper . |
7 | Data for the USA , EEC and Japan all point to an increase in the share of manufacturing output accounted for by the largest firms ( figure 10.2 ) . |
8 | In some respects , this change ( which is part of the " deregulation " of television provided for in the 1990 Broadcasting Act ) will be welcome : no longer will television companies be obliged to submit their controversial programmes to an outside body for preview and pre-censorship . |
9 | This is a specialized form provided for by the Limited Partnership Act 1907 . |
10 | He is a spy , he is a traitor , perhaps he is fortunate not to have faced the extreme penalty provided for in the Criminal Code . ‘ |
11 | The even more rapid decline in the two-party vote in Britain is to some extent compensated for by the increased vote for the smaller parties since the 1970s , but in the United States the proportion of the electorate mobilized by the parties is almost certainly even smaller because of the growing number of single-issue pressure groups in recent years . |