Example sentences of "[be] one for [art] " in BNC.

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1 There has n't been one for a long time and that 's all I can say .
2 You 've always been one for a quiet life , have n't you ? ’
3 ‘ I 've never been one for a sweet wine Never . ’
4 This change has not necessarily been one for the better .
5 ‘ I 'm one for the ready , Mr Five Per Cent , ’ he said to me in his amusing way . ’
6 One important caveat to the E. F. Loftus and Burns study is that the test of memory could be considered to be one for a peripheral detail .
7 Of course if a number of horses are being fed in a paddock , their feedbins should be spaced well apart and there should be one for every horse .
8 She was determined the wedding would be one for the young blind girl to remember , even though it was not likely to be attended by any of the Wychwood gipsies who had been at Boz 's marriage to Nahum 's sister .
9 The question is held to be one for the unrestricted discretion of the jury or magistrates who are allowed to find that even a bruise is enough .
10 So that we 're prepared within the Rural Housing Trust to look at all these ideas , and we 've been looking at the whole question , we feel that this has got to be one for the planners , the planners must be involved in identifying where these problems lie , they 're not uniform , all across the country , er and it 's something that er we therefore need to use the planning er scenario entirely and fully in order to identify where the problem lies .
11 That is one for every minute of every day .
12 Britain has only 3,000 bottle banks , that is one for every 17,000 people , compared to Holland , for example , which has one per 1,400 people .
13 In Powys , on the other hand , there is one for every 590 people .
14 There is one for every school , of course , and this psychologist should have had more training in perceptual handicaps than an ordinary classroom teacher , and should be available to help assess the child and give advice to teachers and parents about how to help them .
15 This is one for the tigers a traditional links with fairways wriggling between sand dunes and where bunkers and gorse are as thick as thieves in a police cell .
16 It really is one for the book . "
17 More commonly , the minister under attack is shielded by collective responsibility and the decision as to whether he or she goes or stays is one for the Prime Minister , based on the criteria of the extent to which he or she has become a liability to the government .
18 If at the time the contract is made , the goods are ascertained ( i.e. identified and agreed upon ) , then the contract is one for the sale of specific goods .
19 There is one for the work force and something called ’ Green Watch ’ on which I have had correspondence with the county director and which costs about £60,000 a year .
20 The question whether a customer knowing of the facts would have taken part in the fraud is one for the jury .
21 The other connection that you might want to make to the rising main is one for an instantaneous gas water heater or electric shower , which need mains pressure , or one of the devices which alter the quality of the water — a softener , conditioner or filter , say .
22 The scheme is one for an imaginatively landscaped , artificial but natural-looking , additional channel to parallel the Thames .
23 ‘ There 's one for a Brigitte Schickert , née Krone , who was living in Dornhausen .
24 It produces five billion food packets every year ; that 's one for every single person on earth .
25 The first is that some 600,000 debt cases ( that is , all types of unpaid debt , including rent and fuel bills as well as unmet credit obligations ) have had to be settled in court each year : that 's one for every 30 families or so .
26 Oh yes , that 's one for the wall ! ’ )
27 So it 's one for the door if ye prefer it . ’
28 Jean says she 's not quite ready for another move yet … so here 's one for the family album … the Hunts stationary for once .
29 There 's one for the area .
30 More people owned motor cars than previously : by 1956 there was one car for every three people in the United States ; in France and Britain the figure was one for every thirteen people .
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