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

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1 When a television crew turns up for a tour of his house and DIY achievements , everything falls apart as he touches it .
2 On arrival , conference participants were invited to sign up for a workshop of their choice .
3 Edberg stamped his world class authority on the match , dominating the 90 minute final and setting himself up for the defence of his Wimbledon title .
4 One grandmother , remembered as ‘ dressed all day in black silk ’ , had an annual income of £700 from the New River Company , which she ‘ spent in bringing us up ’ to make up for the incompetence of her solicitor son : she would sit all day ‘ upright in an armchair at the side of the fire ’ , opposite to her son 's .
5 The world No. 1 gave the tie her best , however , but even that was not enough to make up for the shortcomings of her second in command , Claudia Kohde- Kilsch .
6 The third night , above the rattling progress of a late train , he had pummelled Zoë with his fists , and not heard the frightened crying of his children , when she had said that no fucking way was she going to be holed up for the rest of her days in bloody , bloody Damascus .
7 let's face it , you know , deserve to be locked up for the rest of their natural lives .
8 For the last hour his progressively alcoholised brain had reminded him of the consequences of justice ( small ‘ j ’ ) : of bringing a criminal before the courts , ensuring that he was convicted for his sins ( or was it his crimes ? ) , and then getting him locked up for the rest of his life , perhaps , in a prison where he would never again go to the WC without someone observing such an embarrassingly private function , someone smelling him , someone humiliating him .
9 But it started to make me feel scared that it was something I was going to have to bring up for the rest of my life .
10 ‘ You 're a bastard and thief and deserve to be locked up for the rest of your life ’
11 One outraged victim Gail York , 23 , yelled : ‘ You 're a bastard and a thief and deserve to be locked up for the rest of your life . ’
12 ‘ I prefer it if men find ways of dressing to enhance their personality rather than using clothes to make up for the lack of one .
13 This has become so serious a concern that early in 1991 , less than a year before their latest deadline for the launch of CD-I , Philips themselves established their own CD-I publishing operation , perhaps in an effort to energise CD-I disc investment or to make up for the lack of it .
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