Example sentences of "be [verb] for [pers pn] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | I 'd been caddying for Ralph Moffatt on the pro circuit and got him through the pre-qualifier at Fairhaven , so I told him I 'd be caddying for him in the Open as I 'd heard nothing from Jack . |
2 | Andy has got a job to do and so have I. But if I lose he will be gutted for me at the end and if I lose I will be gutted for him . ’ |
3 | As a result , a patient can relate to one group of staff during the waking hours , and knows that the same staff will be caring for him during the night period . |
4 | For all she knew , Molassi could be waiting for her at the bottom , his knife drawn , standing over the body of Rodomonte . |
5 | The photographer would be waiting for her by the exhibition stand in twenty minutes or so . |
6 | I 'd get a phone call from his secretary and then a limousine would be waiting for me down the lane . |
7 | ‘ No doubt the news will be waiting for me around the garrison by now , ’ he said . |
8 | Will Mum and Dad be waiting for me in the hall ? |
9 | They would be waiting for him at the train 's next scheduled stop , the guard would see to that . |
10 | I would be waiting for him outside the room and would suggest that he too withdraw a minor claim ; then add a new demand . |
11 | He should be waiting for you in the transport yard at the back . ’ |
12 | ‘ Sophia will be waiting for us at the vicarage , ’ said Mrs Grandison . |
13 | Governors will , therefore , depend heavily upon the guidance and information which can be provided for them within the school . |
14 | With a bit of luck , she would be begging for it by the time he came back . |
15 | Next morning in the market , shopping for a picnic , our struggles with the phrasebook brought an English-speaking Thai to our rescue , explaining that the quail eggs we had bought were raw , but could be cooked for us in the soup cauldron wherever we took breakfast . |
16 | I 'll never be mistaken for him in the street then . |
17 | It had already dawned on the girl that , from this moment on , she was on her own , and that there was nobody to stand between her and whatever might be devised for her in the future . |
18 | He was so modest , reticent , and reserved that his paper on his voyage of 1880 , given at the Royal Geographical Society , had to be read for him by the secretary . |