Example sentences of "for [pos pn] [coord] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The mental or spiritual body retains all the potential of the individual for his or her future development .
2 If an employee decides to accept the transfer as a result of a counselling session which gave a misleading impression , it can only spell trouble for his or her future happiness in the job .
3 However , no artist has an inherent right to claim taxpayer support for his or her private vision of art if that vision mocks the moral and spiritual basis on which our society is founded .
4 By s12 of the Solicitors Act , the Law Society is given discretion to grant or refuse an application for a practising certificate in the following cases : ( 1 ) a first application ; ( 2 ) an application by a solicitor who has never held an unconditional certificate since admission ; ( 3 ) where 12 months or more will have elapsed since a practising certificate was last held ; ( 4 ) after the disciplinary tribunal has ordered a penalty or costs against the applicant or delivered a reprimand ; ( 5 ) after failure by the applicant to offer sufficient explanation for his or her professional conduct after being called upon so to do ; ( 6 ) after failure to deliver an accountant 's report in due time ( and an additional fee will be payable if the discretion is not invoked to refuse the application ) ; ( 7 ) after the expiry of a period of suspension ; ( 8 ) after the name of the applicant who has been struck off is restored to the roll ; ( 9 ) while the applicant is an undischarged bankrupt ; ( 10 ) after the applicant 's discharge from bankruptcy or after the applicant has entered into a composition or deed of arrangement for the benefit of his creditors ; ( 11 ) while the applicant is a patient as defined by s94 of the Mental Health Act 1983 or a person as to whom powers have been exercised under s104 of the Mental Health Act 1959 or s98 of the 1983 Act ; ( 12 ) where the applicant has received a sentence of imprisonment ; ( 13 ) where the applicant has failed to satisfy a money judgment against him or her which is not a judgment limited to costs and which is not a judgment in respect of which indemnity or relief from some other person is available .
5 No matter how humble the person with whom he is dealing , he always respects that person for his or her positive qualities .
6 With this equipment the patient will enjoy the dignity of doing an active job until a more long term solution is found for his or her medical problem .
7 The brochures issued by each of the plaintiffs encourages a borrowing member to have such a report for his or her own protection .
8 Documents prepared by the solicitor for his or her own benefit or protection belong to that solicitor ; so do documents sent by the client , which are intended to pass to him or her .
9 Suppose , for example , that a contractor is behind schedule for his or her own reasons .
10 The use of ‘ one ’ , for instance , is frequently a device for indicating status or attitude , as when a politician attempts to establish neutrality or objectivity for his or her own opinions , through such phrases as ‘ one knows … ’ .
11 But lasting influence depended not only on some form of regular , close contact , but equally crucially on a sense of affinity , of common inheritance and character , which allowed a grandchild to see in a grandparent a model for his or her own development .
12 The main contractor has to plan for subcontracted work just as seriously as for his or her own work .
13 Application for an IVA may be made by an undischarged bankrupt or , more likely , by a person who , being insolvent , would be able to petition for his or her own bankruptcy .
14 Tough love should be kind , gentle and understanding to both the family member and the primary sufferer , while nonetheless allowing each to be fully responsible for his or her own feelings and behaviour and for taking the full consequences of all choices of individual action .
15 The subject is often shown how to pass the blame for his or her own problems in life onto others — be they parents , teachers or environment .
16 The sufferer has to learn to live in reality , blaming self rather than others for his or her own problems and recognising that unconditional love could only be received when it is equally freely given .
17 The purpose of education in general is to help each pupil to be responsible for his or her own self-education throughout life — holistically and with integrity .
18 The programme is simple but certainly not easy and most of all it is individual : nobody can give recovery to anyone else , each recovering person has to work for his or her own recovery .
19 Helping the sufferer to become actively involved in and responsible for his or her own recovery .
20 It is generally felt that the manager should be responsible for his or her own office overheads , telephone bills , secretarial services and so on .
21 A 24-year-old university-educated anorexic confined to hospital for his or her own safety ?
22 A judge should only find a child guilty of contributory negligence if he or she is of such an age as reasonably to be expected to take precautions for his or her own safety ; and then he or she is only to be found guilty if blame should be attached to him or her .
23 Alternatively , the RFL may apply for his or her own entry to be cancelled .
24 Blaming other people , while opting out of responsibility for his or her own condition , is the hallmark of a sufferer from addictive disease .
25 The purchaser of a completed development , for example a factory , who intends to use the development for his or her own trade purposes or lease it to a person using it for trade purposes may be able to claim capital allowances .
26 These are claimed by the purchaser of an industrial building who is using it for his or her own trade or leasing it to another for that person 's trade , at the rate of 4% per annum on cost .
27 The Regulations recognise that a teacher may keep notes on a pupil simply for his or her own use .
28 When a smoker dies of lung cancer , the poor victim is almost always blamed for his or her own death .
29 Even though the individual shopper will often find some functional justification for his or her particular choice , as being especially practical , other reasons , some of which will be analysed in later chapters , may be adduced , relating to social rather than functional considerations which may more convincingly account for the majority of purchases .
30 These were used by the computer operator to write programs for his or her particular purpose .
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