Example sentences of "for [pers pn] [verb] [pron] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I have discussed it with Dorothy Tomkin I think we have a genuine desire to move to a more authority-based planning system , erm , we have n't got the methods of doing that yet , and I turn to C B S and to local authority and to the traditional carers for them to join us in that .
2 It is clear from the conversation that there was sympathy for the person involved because it was easy for them to place themselves in that position , allowing the event to be normalized .
3 But there 's one one fault really it takes approximately fifteen to eighteen months for them to pass anything like that and that could be one
4 If we decide er , at each point of the committee meeting I , I think we should be processing any and suggestion forms that procedure owners have received , in a reasonable time , in order for them to process it before that meeting .
5 Now they may have their own reasons for that and it may be difficult for them to send someone at this precise moment , but I do n't think that they 're necessarily geared up to dealing with the sorts of things that you want them to deal with .
6 Sir , yeah thank you Chairman I hope members will accept this recommendation in paragraph two three and two four says it all , no need for me to say anything on this matter , these figures are
7 It would be madness for me to refuse you through hurt pride when all I want to do is be with you , as I have just found out . ’
8 There 's been talk of Bruce leaving but it will be a greater achievement for me to establish myself as first choice with him still at the club . ’
9 " If your wastage rate on these plantations was n't so high , there would be no need for me to supply you with new coolies all the time , " said Lepine sourly .
10 I would be happy for you to use it in any way you felt appropriate .
11 Well not a will for for you know somebody like that .
12 It really is not good enough for you to preen yourself in this way while Britain continues to suffer from the consequences of a largely uneducated workforce .
13 Apparently he 'd fixed up with the travel agency which handled Dalgety 's bookings for you to join him at all the Grands Prix . ’
14 So there 's really no need for you to boost it by spending hours on the sun-lounger .
15 But if Alexei said that he was not involved , then probably he was telling the truth , otherwise there would be no reason for him to say anything at all .
16 This was his first mainline trip and he was grateful to Sam for his advice and also for him taking him on this trip .
17 Parliament was thus taking the marital exemption into realms uncontemplated even by Hale , who believed that it was one thing for a man to have sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent , quite another for him to force her into sexual intercourse with others .
18 There is much abstruse learning on the subject ( see , in particular , the illuminating discussion by Windeyer J. in Mason v. New South Wales , 102 C.L.R. 108 , 139–142 ) , but for present purposes it is not , I think , necessary for us to concern ourselves with this point of classification .
19 It is of course very difficult for us to reconcile ourselves to such a perspective .
20 And it is not possible for us to know anything at all about him unless he is generous enough to disclose himself Another book in this series has tackled the question of revelation ; suffice it to say at this point that without revelation we can not say anything about the Lord who is Spirit .
21 and it would be wrong for us to consider it in that form .
22 ‘ Holy Cross played very hard and spread the floor well which made it difficult for us to trap them in open play .
23 This was telling them — trying to bolster their morale — that we were coming to their aid when it was virtually impossible for us to aid them at that time .
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