Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv] [adv] for the " in BNC.

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1 The crisis has come too quickly for the company , which only this morning was due to launch a new truck .
2 The selling franchise arrangement has operated quite successfully for the past eight years , and Argent Distributors have grown at a steady pace during this period , as can be seen from the sales turnover figures .
3 The morale of the teachers is very low after everyone has tried so hard for the school .
4 ‘ The morale of the teachers is very low after everyone has tried so hard for the school .
5 We shall have to go pretty hard for the rest of the year to cover this interest and generate greater earnings per share .
6 Even Moran had to admit it though he dismissed it as well by saying that it would have done well enough for the likes of him as it had been .
7 However fraught the relationship with their mother , how could she have cared so little for the older woman as to send notice of her intentions through another teenager ?
8 Having played so well for the first two rounds and then the first three holes of the third , by which time he was tieing for the lead with Parry at 10 under par , Woosnam came to grief immediately after the Saturday storm .
9 Our academic staff will have to compete very hard for the research money to continue their activities , while at the same time maintaining the quality of the teaching they offer students .
10 ‘ I 'm sure you 've stripped willingly enough for the men who have enjoyed your favours in the past . ’
11 He said ‘ Kylie had prepared really well for the part of Char .
12 Thank you Mr , a point which you 've made consistently persistently for the last hour .
13 Since then it had gone very badly for the small Halfling regiment .
14 In fact , at the death-bed there was an astonishing display of Protestant respect for the regent who had fought so hard for the French alliance and the survival of the Catholic faith .
15 In particular , men like Paul-Henri Spaak , who had worked so hard for the EEC , were conscious of the fact that many economic interests within the Six supported the foundation of the EEC primarily because of the advantages they believed would be accruable to themselves .
16 The Holy Week that had passed so harshly for the children in Sea House had passed less fearfully in Dynmouth itself .
17 Individuals have to search more intensively for the most favourably priced goods , and firms have to determine their new prices ( not easy when production costs are continually changing ) and then disseminate the information .
18 Maidstone chairman John Waugh , who bought the club just three weeks ago , said : ‘ I feel desperate for the people that have worked so hard for the club .
19 This success could not have been achieved without the dedication of all the Chairmen , voluntary Officers , Committee members and teachers who have worked so hard for the Society during those years .
20 To take you , a married woman and mother , away from your child when you have grieved so sorely for the other does not make sense .
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