Example sentences of "and [noun sg] for [art] [noun sg] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 He had had 2,500 letters from members of the public expressing their grief , sympathy and admiration for a man who they felt had in some way belonged to ordinary people and understood them .
2 However hard I work and struggle for the future there are ever snares to catch me and sometimes I see no end to it and think myself doomed to pass my days in toil and nothing else .
3 The main aim of the project now is to make sure that the people who are on the receiving end of the services have more control and responsibility for the work which is being developed .
4 A large measure of the centre 's warmth , however , comes from Shearer and Monteith themselves — both have tremendous energy and enthusiasm for the work they do .
5 Through the Lafayette — and perhaps more particularly through the heroism of Victor Chapman at Verdun — there began to develop in the United States an appreciation and sympathy for the poilus themselves such as had never been provoked by any other battle .
6 He found time too to father an illegitimate child , shortly afterwards abandoning both child and mistress for the woman he might well eventually have married , Margot Heinemann .
7 On the right of trade unionists to join a trade union of their choice , the hon. Gentleman seems to have forgotten that even Bill Morris , the general secretary-elect of the trade union that sponsors the hon. Gentleman , has said : ’ today when we are about choice and opportunity for the individual there is no choice in this matter or opportunity within them ’ .
8 The NCCED and the other organisations listed on pages 145–7 offer support and counselling for a woman who has spent the whole of her life caring for parents or a relative who has died .
9 Participants travelled from as far apart as Dublin and Derry for the clinic which was conducted by Martin McIlhatton , chairman of the British Wheelchair Tennis Association .
10 The sudden rekindling of past memories and passion for the man she had been about to marry .
11 It fitted excellently with the wave of Anglo-Catholic feeling and nostalgia for the past which was passing over England .
12 A taciturn man , he had no other way of expressing his hatred and contempt for the man who had brought disgrace to the family and ruin to his beloved Carewscourt .
13 If geomorphology is to achieve full stature as a branch of geology operating upon the frontier of research into fundamental principles and laws of earth science , it must turn to the physical and engineering sciences and mathematics for the vitality it now lacks .
14 ‘ I still think you should try marrying Peg , ’ Fred said , starting for the door and giving Arthur as sharp a seizure as he had ever had of longing and hatred for an ally who was deserting him to go to sleep .
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