Example sentences of "[verb] for [art] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 It would have to wait for a more opportune time , she decided , and replaced the receiver .
2 She went out , leaving Peter Suvarov to wait for a more rational assessment of Julia 's state from Annunziata .
3 The connection time was very tight and there were some weeks when I rarely caught the 7 o'clock bus to Ferryhill and had to wait for the 7.15am bus which takes a longer route and delayed my arrival even more .
4 ‘ If everything continues to go well , she will stay for no more than seven days . ’
5 This , of course , is a popular subject : it seems particularly attractive to the poet-turned-novelist because of the scope it offers for the tremulously sensitive probing of feelings .
6 And then of course , this was all blown when th the raids stopped for a quite a long time , all these bloody kids came back !
7 It was an easy way out , but one which could make for a far more enjoyable session .
8 References may not be recommended where they could be appropriate or useful ; in other places , too many references can make for a very tedious search .
9 In a typical institutional kitchen the combination of floor tile , water , grease , food spills and so on can make for a very dangerous environment .
10 If workers are given jobs for life or if their wages are linked to age and seniority does this not make for a much less flexible labour market ?
11 Few performers would be entirely happy touring the country as , say , Oswald Mosley , although it might make for a more interesting evening dramatically .
12 I promise it will make for a more positive atmosphere around you .
13 Some of the procedures of discourse analysis will make for a more profound examination of this process .
14 The enormous contribution made throughout history — particularly in the arts — to society by homosexuals should surely make for a more tolerant and sympathetic understanding than to refer with such scorn to Wilde 's ‘ abnormal and filthy practises ’ .
15 If the English paintings in the National Gallery could be included ( and I imagine that is not possible ) , it would make for a truly remarkable museum a real tribute to the ‘ Englishness of English art ’ .
16 Twice a week , having given their word of honour that they would not attempt to escape , those prisoners who wished to go for a heavily guarded march through the surrounding countryside , along lanes chosen for their loneliness , were allowed to do so .
17 I think it would be better , in my own experience , move over to that er the left a little bit just to go for a slightly more interesting composition .
18 Now we need to go for a more direct experience , feed in the kind of energy you get at raves , for example .
19 And indeed , to go for a more precise figure would suggest that I was making a particular point .
20 I mean that was made abundantly clear by Mr Topham , who represented the Parish Council at the site meeting , whe when er one of the senior planning officers was present , so it 's an absolute nonsense if they 've gone and encouraged the developers to go for an even higher roof line .
21 ‘ MPs do n't seem to go for the very expensive end of the Indian restaurant market , ’ says Peter Grove .
22 Horse riding : Available every day , as well as horse drawn carriage rides for the less energetic !
23 Even allowing for a more diverse class-composition , this village inhabits another world from that other .
24 Conversely , Henry VII 's shell is more tubular , probably allowing for a more natural appearance of majesty when positioning the funerary sceptres in the hands .
25 Given that conditions had changed greatly in forty years , and that ‘ the right to know ’ had in every walk of life assumed paramount importance , it seemed nevertheless unrealistic — even allowing for the vastly different scale of the conflict — for relatives of servicemen to protest at lack of information over but a few days or even hours .
26 All these findings on the relationship between housing and unemployment are not substantially altered by allowing for the generally lower social status — and therefore higher risk of unemployment — among local authority tenants as both this study and the work of a number of other researchers has shown ( McCormick , 1983 ; Hughes and McCormick , 1987 ; Murphy and Sullivan , 1986 ; an extended bibliography of the general topic of housing and labour market interactions is given in Munro , 1986 ; Labour Force Survey 1983 and 1984 , 1986 , Table 6.6 ; Sullivan and Falkingham , forthcoming , Tables 1 , 2 ) .
27 Even allowing for the traditionally light-hearted Italian attitude toward obtaining government money , Italy 's wolves number at best only about 150 , including puppies .
28 Could we climb that fast , even allowing for the more modest grading of most of it ?
29 Indeed , it is difficult to justify many of the cases where tapping is strongly suspected on the ground that it was necessary for the detection of really serious crime or to deal with major subversion , even allowing for the very wide definition of subversion announced by Lord Harris of Greenwich in 1975 when he said that
30 After allowing for the much higher non-attendance rate in controls , the annual rate of eye examination per patient and the number of patients referred to a hospital ophthalmic clinic were comparable in the two groups .
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