Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [verb] for [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 But to live there means also the opportunity to vote for a particular party , whose quixotry and honesty have touched me .
2 It is interesting that , as the opportunity to paint for a specific exhibition has offered itself , a freer and less tentative approach can be seen both in subject matter and technique .
3 Nonetheless , once in recovery , the opportunity remains for the recovering person to extend his or her range of physical abstinence and , by doing this , the relapse rate may in time come to be less than at present .
4 There is also the opportunity to register for a part-time PhD degree at the University of Warwick .
5 ‘ All I wanted on behalf of the team was the opportunity to qualify for the European Cup final off the back of our last two Champions League matches , ’ said the manager .
6 One has transferred to the communications department and all were offered the opportunity to work for the new contract firm .
7 In 1960 the pattern which had emerged seemed likely to remain in force for some time to come , with the EEC countries preferring a maximum of integration and the remainder opting for a minimal level of intergovernmental association .
8 The royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings concern themselves exclusively with the rituals required for a successful passage through the Underworld .
9 Canary set out to purchase the base airframes for the planned conversions and marginally flyable Texans and Vibrators were collected from across North America and ferried to the modification headquarters at Long Beach , California .
10 But when they cast off Penry seemed reassuringly unconcerned , and sang under his breath as the Angharad headed for the turbulent stretch of sea separating Gullholm from the coast .
11 Section 9 of the UCTA provides for the partial abolition of the doctrine of fundamental breach in relation to contract terms which have to satisfy the element of reasonableness under the UCTA , such as exclusion clauses governed by s 3 .
12 Suppose , father being impoverished and son having come into money , the father had required the creditor to sue for the whole sum ?
13 He regressed the change in the spot price on the change in the futures price for the previous five-minute period and found a positive and highly significant relationship .
14 The result was that the Seayak went for an unscheduled underwater swim round campsite bay .
15 Joyce 's time at Battersea brought him no closer to getting a degree or to having the money to pay for a conventional education .
16 Thus either the comparative inefficiency of one hemisphere in dealing with the information presented and/or a reduction in stimulus fidelity consequent upon hemispheric transfer are held to account for the advantage obtained for a particular half of the visual field .
17 But we still have to train people to be able to cook under any conditions — a young soldier can often find himself on his own in the field cooking for a given number of people .
18 At Maastricht , the Germans argued for a common foreign policy for the European Community .
19 Steady pressure , however , persuaded the National Heritage Memorial Fund to provide the endowment needed for the National Trust to take it on .
20 Quite what the taxpayer got for the extra money is not readily apparent .
21 The decision to look for a significant equity partner appears to be Virgin 's attempt to keep out of the clutches of the five majors while remaining a credible force in the worldwide music business .
22 However , serum triglyceride levels did not prove to be a significant factor for coronary heart disease in this multivariate analysis and this is probably because of the correction made for the inverse relationship between triglycerides and HDL .
23 The bulletins used for the Zambian languages were prepared in the early morning , because ZBS staff required time for translation .
24 Phosphorylation of the unspliced neural version results in a decrease in sensitivity , whereas the opposite occurs for the spliced version found in the periphery .
25 The groups exist for the whole age range , from pre-school upwards .
26 Reduction of the hours worked for the full-time employees and not for the part-time employees would result in a financial advantage for the full-time employees .
27 In lively talk with friends we all continually break the rules appropriate for the written form , and Mr Baker on the radio was no exception .
28 On the one hand , GCSE requires them to develop new ways of teaching the traditional two-year subject course and , in so doing , preparing pupils with the skills required for an external exam .
29 Finally , in this small sample , a note might be made of the £520 paid for the Descriptive Bibliography of the Books Printed at the Ashendene Press 1895–1935 , published in an edition of 390 copies signed by C. H. St. J. Hornby .
30 Then dis discontinuity , does the function exist for a whole range ?
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