Example sentences of "[vb pp] for [pers pn] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The money we lifted was hardly intended for them in the first place , was it ? ’
2 The chief preoccupation of Methuen 's later years , apart from his painting , and one for which he denied himself many luxuries , was the restoration , maintenance , and improvement of Corsham Court , the family seat , and of the collection of pictures which hung in the magnificent gallery built and furnished for them in the 1760s .
3 In the event , it proved to be even tougher , dominated for us by the worsening situation in California .
4 Yes , Mrs Jones , we have a room booked for you on the thirtieth of July — can I be of any assistance to you ?
5 Little did I imagine that such a move was destined for me within the next two years .
6 The divine drama illuminated for us by the Holy Spirit disintegrates into puzzles , conundrums and endless interpretations .
7 Little was done for him in the three years up to his seventeenth birthday when , like so many others , he found companionship and , ironically , the security he craved for by joining the army .
8 And after all the running around I 've done for you in the last couple of days .
9 Another is a concerto written for her by the British composer Derek Bourgeois .
10 Economic management was largely a matter of measuring resources of manpower and materials and adjudicating between bids made for them by the armed services and the major industries .
11 It is particularly interesting , however , to discover that a small group of white collar workers at Rolls Royce did not want an intellectually taxing job and provisions were made for them in the final design .
12 Donal was married on August 29 and shortly afterwards an appointment was made for him at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London .
13 He 'd had a new set made for him by the professional but somehow could not get used to them .
14 He had adopted his slighting manner , he knew , to protect himself from the attraction which she had possessed for him from the first moment that he had seen her .
15 Now , new offices were being built for it on the other side of the road , but they were not quite ready , and meantime , the new publisher from the East and his editors functioned in an atmosphere of such utter confusion that it is doubtful if an efficiency expert could even have fought his way in through the door .
16 He was compensated with a pension secured for him by the new lord treasurer , Sir Thomas Osborne ( later Earl of Danby , q.v . ) .
17 Now we were using a rather old radio set at the time called a TR9 that was not one of the better things that our radio and radar boffins produced for us in the early days of RT air-to-ground and vice-versa .
18 With regard to English , he suggests that what he sees as the limitations of ‘ metropolitan ’ use of the language may not be present in other registers : ‘ still an integration of thought and feeling in metaphor and imagery is what we seek to have recreated for us in the best literature ’ ( ibid. p. 78 ) .
19 So he passed over and the trumpets sounded for him on the other side . ’
20 From the shops it was a short visit to the launderette , where his week 's supply of dirty washing had been cleaned , pressed and packed for him by the friendly woman who supervised the place .
21 I was running the wrong race ; I should never have been entered for it in the first place .
22 No um Michael Fraser Associates have now started a lobbying operation which is run for them by the former Chief Executive of the Tory Party in Scotland whose name I 've forgotten but he lives down at Tiningham in East Lothian ah , now if I could get him in if Fred does n't object and again if Fred did n't object and the other guy did n't object it might be worth getting a member of Parliament in
23 To symbolise her new life , her new role defined for her by the male rule-makers of society , a girl may even be given a new name on marriage .
24 If those who work in the media wish to enjoy the freedom desired for them by the Royal Commission — the freedom to publish facts and opinions which are in the public interest — they may have to forgo some of the comparative freedom they enjoy to publish facts and opinions which are not .
25 The Diggorys were long abed , and Hector shut up in her little room , but candles had been left for her by the front door .
26 Indeed , Eoin O'Duffy , who led an Irish contingent to Spain to help Franco , maintained that they had gone to fight the battle of Christianity against Communism , a view which was confirmed for them by the Irish Dominican father , Revd Paul O' Sullivan when he said :
27 She 'd slaved for him for the last seven year , and before that ever since she was born — eight or nine year was it — at the Old Mint ?
28 Sometimes the contrast is not so clearly expressed for us in the twentieth century as it would have been in the first century , so we have to rely on commentaries to point out the way that the apostle was thinking .
29 The contrast between British Socialism , as then exemplified by trade unionism , and LEGA , could hardly be sharper ; the first , insistent on its traditional and conservative role , the role dispensed for it in the Victorian era by evolving Capitalism — to purvey labour to employing capital ; the second , looking towards a synthesis to accommodate and resolve the opposed interests contained in that dispensation , looking towards ‘ the third way ’ .
30 He passed them on to another colleague who led us finally to our places which were kept for us in the Grand Salon .
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