Example sentences of "[noun pl] that [verb] for [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Corporatism thus implies an ‘ institutional fusion ’ , whereby organizations that developed for the representation of interests become instruments of state intervention ( Jessop 1979 ) .
2 The music and lyrical ideas are the stuff of nightmares , foam-flecked poetic rantings that go for the throat and refuse to let go no matter how hard you may plead .
3 But those limits applied only to services rendered to patients covered by Medicare and Medicaid , government programmes that pay for the care of the elderly and poor .
4 Britain contains three areas that vie for the term of a ‘ mini ’ Silicon Valley ; they are centred on Bristol , Reading and Cambridge .
5 ‘ Roads , park , dispensary , institute , and so on — a hundred and twenty thousand pounds ; repairs and upkeep , recurring , four thousand … ’ and so on through all the elements that make for the running of a town , ending with the caution that it was ‘ all very round-figurey . ’
6 One is to breed together different parental lines that differ for the trait of interest .
7 They based the Alliance 's first ‘ Force Goals ’ upon outdated concepts that called for the deployment of very large conventional forces by the Alliance .
8 Businesses that qualify for the relief include those of market makers on The Stock Exchange , but no other businesses dealing in securities , stocks or shares .
9 This example will emphasize the difficulties that arise for the falsificationist when the complexities of major theory changes are taken into account .
10 And we lack provisions that allows for a presidency in the absence of a minister is a good one as long as it is monitored closely by district council .
11 We believe that it is the failure to map from roles to names that accounts for the difficulty in keeping track of who is doing what to whom in certain complicated texts with many characters — some Russian novels , for example .
12 They crossed the outer ward , followed by covert glances and whispered wonderings that halted for a moment the bustle and business of the day .
13 The different playing philosophies that account for the North-South divide are emphasised by the views of two of the most successful coaches or recent times — Australia 's Bob Dwyer and Ian McGeechan of Scotland and the British Lions .
14 Instead it is necessary to think in terms of a bundle of policies translated through design guidelines into the construction of specific physical facilities that allow for a diversity of cycling needs .
15 And both these books pale before novels that contend for the mantle of Disraeli : those of Jeffrey Archer himself .
  Next page