Example sentences of "provision make for [noun] " in BNC.

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1 An annualized inflation rate of between 12 and 15 per cent was predicted and provision made for salary increases in line with this rate .
2 In response to requests from a number of Departments within the University , the Enterprise Centre looked at the provision made for students wishing to start their own businesses or with business ideas which they want to explore .
3 This , as mentioned above , is defined as ‘ educational provision which is additional to , or otherwise different from , the educational provision made for children of [ the child 's ] age in schools maintained by the LEA ’ .
4 He displayed perfectly that contradiction of attitude ( or ‘ supreme paradox ’ , as Phillipson puts it ) in ‘ expert ’ thinking on old age that had emerged by the 1940s — on the one hand portraying the elderly as a disastrous burden on society ( men over the age of 65 and women ova 60 had formed 6.2 per cent of the British population in 1901 , an estimated 12.0 per cent in 1941 , and would be 20.8 per cent in 1971 ) , yet on the other hand , paying lip-service to their status as an exceptionally deserving group : ‘ Provision made for age must be satisfactory ; otherwise great numbers may suffer .
5 She was an extremely angry , very bitter woman , who was determined to get everybody around her as angry as she could , and she succeeded , and I do n't know where she 's moved now , but I 'm sure she will go on and do the same thing , and frankly , I despair of anything being done unless there is some provision made for people such as herself , and one of her friends in particular .
6 By analysing a job with the benefit of experience , the peaks and troughs of activity can be identified and proper provision made for staff allocation .
7 And so there does not need to be a separate provision made for numbers of concealed households .
8 The picture includes the provision made for amateur and professional , part-time and full-time church musicians .
9 Their four million inhabitants have an automatic right of access to ‘ wild land ’ , with provision made for privacy , disturbance and damage .
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