Example sentences of "[adv] [noun] for each " in BNC.

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1 Students with Aficionado tickets for Code C performances will be paying only £4–40 for each performance .
2 In business studies there were generally six or so applicants for each place .
3 The first stage of creating the definition is to write down headings for each of the six CATWOE categories and try to fill them in .
4 I went to only had er there was about between twenty five and thirty in each year and there was only form for each year so I say
5 A similar comparison of 1984 and 1992 child benefit rates , taking into account the increase in earnings , shows that the benefit from next April should be £12.55p per child ; instead it will be £9.65p for the first child and only £7.80p for each subsequent child .
6 For just £1.00 for each feature , you can receive any of those listed above .
7 Under income support regulations they were allowed £17 for each child every week , but under the student grant regulations they were allowed just £8 for each child per week .
8 He said : ‘ I should also be grateful if you would inform your readers that the Department of Transport have now agreed to reduce the fees for the new Transport & Works Act Orders which replace the old Light Railway Orders with effect from January 1 and the fees which will be payable in respect of applications where no compulsory purchase order is being sought will now be £750 for the first hectare ( or part of one hectare ) and thereafter £250 for each 0.5 hectare ( or part thereof ) with a maximum fee of £80,000 .
9 They have argued for decades as to whether we are a result of our environment or our genetic inheritance , and there are always supporters for each extreme as well as for every position in between .
10 The methods that she uses erm , and I think this needs to be done well before a disaster , unfortunately so often people only react at times like this and I think it 's such a pity that they do n't do it beforehand , but it 's working on basic assertiveness skills , communications skills like giving a language for feelings , erm building up support for each other , plus the creative work — getting things down
11 There was a lot of teasing and we had soon thought up nicknames for each other .
12 The EC labelling will revolve around an international panel , comprising representatives of industry , trade unions , environmentalists and consumers , who will draw up criteria for each group of products on a " cradle to grave " basis .
13 This year 's champions will take away £200 , the runners-up awarded £100 and there is also £50 for each of the losing semi-finalists .
14 They are the ex-Communist bosses and party officials who are managing to fix up jobs for each other while pushing others out of jobs they have held for years and onto the streets .
15 The mean number of tubes inserted and the mean follow up time for each group were compared by using Student 's t test .
16 The Darlington service cost about £250,000 a year about £40 for each callout .
17 Miss Emma Nicholson , MP for Devon West , a member of the delegation , said that would work out at about £20,000 for each victim .
18 SUCCESSORS to one-arm bandits , fruit machines have to pay out 70p for each £1 slotted in .
19 I AM trying to obtain a loan of £5,000 but loan companies appear to want interest of about £500 for each £1,000 borrowed .
20 A second person then gives out forfeits for each person to do .
21 In that year the electricity bill for one of the winter quarters was just over £25 but before today 's Society Stewards become too wistful they should also reflect on the fact that the average Sunday offering then through the envelope system was below £17 , or about 7p for each subscriber .
22 But holders of Treasury 9¾ per cent stock 2002 , if they held the stock until redemption in August 2002 , would only receive back £100 for each £100 nominal amount of stock ; i.e. they would lose capital value of £3.09375 on each £100 nominal amount of stock .
23 An increasingly popular alternative for visitors to continental Europe are Eurocheques and Eurocards , but they can be expensive , with typical charges around £8 a year for the card and around £2 for each cheque cashed .
24 The latest figures show that the Lords cost tax payers £4 million in the year from April 1990 to 1991 , or almost £30,000 for each day they sat .
25 Taxpayers pay the equivalent of over £60 for each person in the EEC to the CAP budget each year ( Consumers and the Common Agricultural policy , National Consumer Council , 1988 ) .
26 A perfectly satisfactory standard total hip replacement could be marketed for not much over £100 , but the price in Britain now varies from £250 to well over £1000 for each implant .
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