Example sentences of "[was/were] [adv] for the " in BNC.
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1 | Sanatoria , popular by the end of the century , were only for the better-off , apart from some charitable foundations , and in any case had little effect . |
2 | And we nearly come under it er were only for the Yanks . |
3 | Weeks later , half were downstairs for the more tuneful brew mixed up by various members of the Flying DJ family . |
4 | It was July and still light , but most of the better-off inhabitants of this end of Sauchiehall Street were away for the summer . |
5 | " We thought you were away for the week-end , " she said . |
6 | ‘ Only to an expert in family relationships — and I know you were away for the weekend ! ’ |
7 | These measures were more for the maintenance of the industry than to save whales . |
8 | The whole burden of these cuts fell on the colleges of education partly because , as we have seen , their numbers could be swiftly regulated and partly because they were still for the most part institutions predominantly concerned with teacher education . |
9 | By the early seventeenth century , therefore , foreign offices , in so far as they existed , were still for the most part embryonic . |
10 | The other sonatas — No. 4 was written in Los Angeles in 1948 and the next two have not been published — were often for the composer to play himself . |
11 | These were mainly for the purpose of reinforcement or ‘ aides-memoires ’ , but they sometimes represent an effort to extend the orientation into some more substantial instruction . |
12 | Loans made during the 1950s were mainly for the development of infrastructure , such as transport and electric power schemes . |
13 | The picnics were originally for the printers " and their families " , but once large numbers of young women were employed , they seem to have taken on a more youthful atmosphere , and became good opportunities for courtship . |
14 | There was evidently no absolute labour shortage , if only because the reserve armies of the rural population ( at home and abroad ) were now for the first time advancing en masse upon the industrial labour markets . |
15 | He explained that were her speech a success , she would be paid well for comment and pictures provided they were exclusively for the use of the True Brit . |
16 | They were there for the convenience of rail passengers . |
17 | In 1985 in Washington DC I was responsible for the security co-ordination of eleven prime ministers and twenty other Conservative party leaders from around the world who were there for the International Democrat Union Party Leaders ' meeting . |
18 | We went there morning and evening every day , and on Sundays we were there for the lengthy session of Sung Eucharist . |
19 | Ill omens were there for the taking . |
20 | A good many were there for the fun , rather than any dedication to the anti-Fascist cause . |
21 | Black Babies were there for the saving . |
22 | Well , disappointment for Oxford United ; Charlton were there for the taking , United let them off the hook . |
23 | Luckily he was wholly for the Ashleys . |
24 | Twenty pounds of butter was enough for the lease of two and a half desiatiny of land for five years.l Five pudy of linseed cake were exchanged for the approaching harvest of a desiatin of wheat . |
25 | That performance was enough for the bookmakers to make The Fellow favourite for this afternoon 's big one . |
26 | It was enough for the Church that a corpse had been presented for burial . |
27 | This was enough for the Home Secretary to send the case back for a fourth hearing to the Court of Appeal , with the recommendation that they summon Mathews as a witness to test his credibility . |
28 | The majority decision was enough for the BAF to rule that the 22-year-old Croydon sprinter , who was found positive in an out-of-competition test just before the Olympics , remains banned until 1996 . |
29 | Again , while the cry for disestablishment was not a major factor in the political make-up of Hughes or Perks , it was so for the bulk of the movement 's leaders , men like C. A. Berry , Alexander Mackennal , John Clifford , J. B. Paton , A. T. Guttery , W. J. Townsend , C. Silvester Home , R. F. Horton , J. H. Hollowell , J. Carvell Williams , J. E. Ellis , Henry Broadhurst , J. Compton Rickett , Albert Spicer and W. P. Hartley . |
30 | He was all for the idea , and we exchanged addresses . |