Example sentences of "of [verb] for a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Both legal literature and the documentary evidence attest the use of what can be called trust clauses , as well as the practice of using for a single disposition the wording of both legacy and trust . |
2 | Among attractions of a combined survey is the economy of mobilising for a larger survey with fewer turns for the ship . |
3 | It will cover many kinds of shaping for a huge variety of subjects and once learned will save you a good deal of time in making up and garment fitting . |
4 | Ann has n't done a lot of cooking for a long time though , have you really ? |
5 | The art of palpating for a pyloric mass should be taught by experienced senior staff to junior staff and students . |
6 | The Profitboss , in developing his contacts , never forgets that the friendly Steven Cook he met at the conference last month might just be the head of purchasing for a major customer in two years ' time . |
7 | They had no intention of applying for a weekly permit to play on the street corner in every town throughout Scotland . |
8 | Puffer , a nineteenth-century female psychology graduate thinking of applying for an academic post , is told by her college president , ‘ the rumor … concerning your engagement may have … affected the recommendation I sent ’ . |
9 | If we were biologically capable of living for a million years , and wanted to do so , we should assess risks quite differently . |
10 | The closest thing to a suggestion of further co-operation with the SNP was Dennis Canavan 's argument that talks could be held on the narrow agenda of pushing for a multi-option referendum , and a reserved hearing the conference accorded to the Scottish Trades Union Congress general secretary , Campbell Christie . |
11 | Pauline is also in the middle of writing for a new BBC programme about women 's health to be screened around next April . |
12 | It is perhaps the imperative of writing for a national gallery with international exposure which prompts this emphasis on ‘ mastery ’ and ‘ genius ’ . |
13 | You , you ha you establish a rapport of listening for a little while to whatever it is that they 've got to say , and their troubles and their anxieties and I was n't happy that |
14 | As one observer noted , there is a need to develop democratic practice in the classroom as well as outside it , if people 's education is not to become simply ‘ a process of looking for a new set of right answers ’ . |
15 | Erm , we would n't want the policy to progress so far erm as to get to the stage of looking for a specific site and for us to pull the rug underneath the County , and for other authorities to pull the rug from underneath the County at that stage , erm to answer to Mr Heselton 's specific question , of course we would n't object to a new settlement er in Selby , but erm it does n't erm it does n't detract from our objection to erm the principle of the policy , the way the policy 's expressed . |
16 | He is also in the process of looking for a joint venture production partner who would be interested in taking a 49 per cent stake in MTM . |
17 | He is also in the process of looking for a joint venture production partner who would be interested in taking a 49 per cent stake in MTM . |
18 | She had unconsciously put into practice the Winnie the Pooh principle , which rules that the most effective method of searching for a lost person or object is to get lost oneself on the assumption that some force of nature brings all forgotten things together in ignored niches and unfrequented locales . |
19 | The method of solving for a sequential equilibrium in the game outlined in Section 2 proceeds in two stages . |
20 | That we can not cope with another child , that we are not ready for parenthood , that we can not face raising a child without a partner , that we can not afford a child , that our method of birth control failed , that we are the victims of rape , that we can not bear the anguish of carrying a child to term and giving it up for adoption , that we can not accept the responsibility of caring for a handicapped child — these are the reasons why we seek abortion in the vast majority of cases . |
21 | The strain of caring for a disturbed relative can be considerable and the need for an understanding and reliable friend to talk to and share the anxieties with is often very great . |
22 | Housework campaign does little to dispel , since their line makes no distinction between the ‘ housework ’ of skivvying for a demanding but fit husband , and the ‘ housework ’ of caring for a dependent baby . |
23 | The methods and techniques which have been developed to cope with the child-rearing process seem to apply equally to families who are experiencing the difficulties and frustrations of caring for an ageing relative . |
24 | Such an approach enables active work to go on at all times , including those when no change of placement is contemplated or during periods of waiting for a suitable placement to become available . |
25 | His decision to take a year off from international rugby has left selectors with the difficult choice of going for a short-term replacement or of opting for long-term continuity . |
26 | Some may see the bird 's warning cry as falling short of lying for a further reason . |
27 | The decorated ware was given a black lustrous surface with spiral patterns in white , purple , orange and red : some of the patterns were elaborate , clever and confidently executed , showing a sophisticated understanding of the difficulties of designing for a curved surface . |
28 | If we apply the concept of accounting for a separate business entity then there is no reason why the salary paid to the owner should be treated any differently from other salaries . |
29 | Almost immediately , Doherty went on to try to make it general and so , of course , capable of calling for a general strike . |
30 | Her Majesty 's Inspectors in their report on the teaching of English published in 1987 were particularly concerned by the low standard of teaching for A level English : ‘ Teachers spend too much time scrutinizing past papers and then drilling students in what are taken to be the ‘ correct ’ answers . |