Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [n mass] for " in BNC.

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1 Blackpool must pay £35,000 for Nigel Hawkins , the 21-year-old striker signed from Bristol City , if he becomes a first-team regular at Bloomfield Road .
2 People must lose sales for that .
3 And if every ticket is sold the event should raise £1,900 for the fund .
4 The debt must exceed £750 for this procedure to be invoked .
5 With ‘ loan-back ’ schemes , which mainly concerned repossessed properties being bought by BES companies , an investor might pay 100p for each share .
6 We 'll pay £5 for every one used — but sorry , we ca n't return anything you send .
7 We 'll pay £5 for every one used .
8 We 'll pay £5 for every one used — but sorry we ca n't return anything you send
9 We 'll pay £5 for every original letter published .
10 We 'll pay £5 for every original letter published
11 We 'll pay £5 for every original letter published
12 We 'll pay £10 for any we print .
13 We 'll pay £3 for every one printed .
14 We 'll pay £3 for every one printed .
15 We 'll pay £3 for every one printed .
16 The first session costs around £35 for one-and-a-half hours and then you 'll pay £25 for subsequent treatments .
17 He 'd make $500,000 for every dollar the stock rises or $46m if the stock ever gets back to the $145 range .
18 Why graft your arse off for a full week to make £130 , when you could make £150 for one day 's shoplifting ?
19 We survived the General Strike of 1926 , as we could exchange fish for other foods .
20 She had thought they could have fruit for dessert but the bananas looked a bit black and sorry , and there were only two ( bruised ) peaches left .
21 Only Mercedes-Benz could charge £50,800 for a car that is comprehensively outperformed by a Vauxhall Calibra 2.0i 16v , costing £33,550 less , and still call it a sports car .
22 Staff recognized that the approach could supply data for planning , by identifying deficits in provision , and for auditing services or needs .
23 Once you 've created the jobs for people it has given the economies an upturn and I feel it 's rather a shame that the erm the great problems of the of the Germans particularly have put that pressure for high interest rates through the er E R M , through those currencies and one , I think , good thing of Britain 's disaster last year , with with their position in the E R M , is that by lowering interest rates , if we only had a government who wanted to use that opportunity probably , we could train people for for work .
24 And course they were on hinges , the doors , on er the hinges on in the centre hole under the water and course you always knew where then to , where to fit what we used to call fish for th fish for the chain .
25 I think we used to get threepence for that Saturday afternoon 's work for grazing these horses .
26 And you used to get sixpence for that .
27 Coleridge and Wordsworth felt confident that the Monthly Magazine would give £5 for the poem , and they were already discussing details of the plot as they descended from the hills at West Quantoxhead .
28 No one who was at the Brewery Field ( perhaps not even the selectors ) would give twopence for their ability to do so .
29 A rate of exchange of £1 = $ 2.8 , for example , would give $2,800 for every £1,000 .
30 The only way I can describe this is to suggest that a normal 6ft putt on an average ‘ club green ’ would run 15ft for the players at the Masters this week .
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