Example sentences of "[noun prp] [noun] for the [adj] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 These were Denis Baxter for his delicate etching ‘ Cannington Viaduct ’ , Miranda Ellis for the almost abstract and evocatively coloured watercolour ‘ Blue morning kitchen window ’ , Sophie Rider for the solid and amusing sculpture ‘ Horse with tulip ’ and Bonnie Brown for the de Stael-like oil painting ‘ Celia 's dream on the headland ’ .
2 Born in Southampton , he was educated as a private pupil at the Brighton Institution for the Deaf and Dumb by the sign and manual system .
3 He was a President or Vice President of many deaf organisations , including the Royal School for Deaf Children , Margate ; the Charitable and Provident Society for Granting Pensions to the Aged and Infirm Deaf ; London Deaf Cricket Club ; the London branch of the B.D.D.A. He was also a committee member of the Brighton Institution for the Deaf and Dumb , and of the Winchester Deaf Diocesan Mission .
4 William Blomefield Sleight , who was born in 1849 , was the son of William Sleight , the much respected headmaster of the Brighton Institution for the Deaf and Dumb .
5 She is a voluntary visitor for the West Sussex Association for the Disabled and sits on two village committees and looks forward to serving on the Executive Committee of the Medau Society .
6 David designs for the rich and famous ; his companions work in the art world .
7 He is currently CPD Co-ordinator for the Southern and South East Regions and Director of the CPD Unit at Kingston Polytechnic School of Architecture .
8 Other features include a Madagascar Centre for the endangered and unique animals of that country , a World of Invertebrates , a breeding centre for endangered macaws and a walk-through aquarium and redeveloped children 's zoo .
9 Fashanu is still included in Hearts squad to face Partick Thistle tomorrow and may partner Mo Johnston for the first and last time as John Robertson is almost certainly out .
10 In 1914 they launched what was one of their crazier attacks , and on 4th June , the deaf community of Dundee was very nearly the victim when a massive bomb was placed against the doorway of Dunhope Castle , the home of Dundee School for the Deaf and the Dundee Mission to the Deaf and Dumb .
11 agencies contracted to do community care assessments , such as Edinburgh and East of Scotland Society for the Deaf and the Society for the Welfare and Teaching of the Blind ;
12 D. Account for the industrial and political best witnessed in the years 1909 to 1914
13 that it came as no surprise that after six busy years with the Association she was appointed Deputy Head Teacher of the Doncaster School for the Deaf and Director of its Further Education Department .
14 It reorganised itself in 1854 , and took an office in Regent Street , and a year later took the important step of appointing as lay-missioner a Samuel Smith , a teacher at the Yorkshire Institution for the Deaf and Dumb .
15 Youths who had left the Yorkshire Institution for the Deaf and Dumb at Doncaster roamed the streets at a loose end , causing mischief .
16 Now a professional football club playing in the 4th Division of the English football league , it owes its origins to a team formed by the pupils and staff of the Yorkshire Institution for the Deaf and Dumb .
17 Born near Doncaster , Edward Kirk lost his hearing through a severe illness when aged 2 , and was sent to be educated at the Yorkshire Institution for the Deaf and Dumb where his abilities so impressed the headmaster , the great Charles Baker , that he was kept on first as a classroom assistant , thence from 1871 as a teacher .
18 He was not the only deaf person connected with the legal profession for Wakefield , Yorkshire , had a fully practising solicitor , Gerald Smith , of the firm Beaumont , Smith and Beaumont , who had been educated at the Yorkshire Institution for the Deaf and Dumb , Doncaster .
19 The group , who have an active Saturday club and a Monday Club for the blind and partly-sighted , has their mini-coach stolen when it was on loan to another charitable organisation , and they were left with a deficit of £5,500 when the insurance was settled .
20 For all those who thought that homo-eroticism began and ended with Boyz magazine , this photo collection gives a lens-eye view of one Montague Glover , a British Bruce Weber for the Twenties and Thirties ( but without the casting agent , American beefcake or dogs ) .
21 He was accompanied by his Secretary , Dr. David Buxton , formerly headmaster at the Liverpool Institution for the Deaf and Dumb , who had become a convert to oral methods .
22 Polish historians blame Lloyd George for the unstable and unworkable arrangements imposed on Danzig ; they emphasise , quite rightly , his hostility to the Poles and his susceptibility to German pleas .
23 Twenty-five years earlier , in England , Dr. David Buxton , the Principal of the Liverpool School for the Deaf and Dumb , had published a pamphlet On the Marriage and Intermarriage of the Deaf and Dumb in 1857 , in which he produced statistics to back up his belief that while it should not be forbidden for deaf people to marry , it was highly objectionable that they should intermarry .
24 I should like to take this opportunity to thank all the employees of Johnson Matthey for the skilled and dedicated service that resulted in this year 's record performance
25 Born at Cardross , Dumbartonshire , he lost his hearing in infancy through illness and was admitted at the age of 8 into the Glasgow Institution for the Deaf and Dumb where he remained for seven years .
26 William Agnew was born deaf in Glasgow , and at an early age was sent to be educated at the Glasgow Institution for the Deaf and Dumb , where he proved to be a remarkable scholar .
27 SCO wants more business at the high-end of the market — currently some 25% of its sales — and does n't believe there is enough room in the Intel space for the four or more contenders now in line .
28 In the meantime however , Robert Kinniburgh , the Headmaster of the Edinburgh Institution for the Deaf and Dumb , was engaged for his sign language skills as interpreter for the Court .
29 Alexander Ferguson was born deaf in Dundee , and was sent to the Edinburgh Institution for the Deaf and Dumb .
30 Elizabeth Groves , as a young girl , had been befriended by the Queen who met the cost of her education at the London Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb .
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