Example sentences of "[modal v] pay for [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Councillors and officials will demand that such ships should have a mandatory duty to contact the Orkney Harbour 's Department and that the Government should pay for a tug to escort them through the Pentland Firth .
2 It was also decided that the Master , Wardens and Assistants should pay for a key giving them access to the Garden .
3 Christie , who has already signed money-spinning deals with Lucozade and clothing firm High and Mighty since Barcelona , said : ‘ We did n't see why we should pay for a visa when we were prepared to take part in races for nothing .
4 ‘ It has failed to debate the key question of who should pay for the clean-up of contaminated drinking water . ’
5 So what 's happened to the idea that it 's the polluter who should pay for the clean-up , farmers and nitrate manufacturers .
6 Developers should pay for the cost of the additional traffic that they generate .
7 If one of a pair of riding boots is damaged the other boot can not be used on its own and we should pay for the cost of a new pair .
8 Other principles accepted by the declaration were : i ) that the polluter should pay for the cost of the clean-up ; ii ) that environmental damage should be guarded against even if there were no apparent scientific reasons for doing so — the " precautionary principle " ; iii ) that women have " a vital role in environmental management and development " ; and iv ) that , while nations have a right to exploit their own resources , they must not damage the environments of other states .
9 In nineteen eighty nine , Mrs Margaret Thatcher said , I do not see why we should pay for the education of conflict .
10 Into the Home territory beyond they had to go fairly warily , but less so than if they had been a weaker company , not because of fears that the Homes would betray them to Dunbar but in that they were always jealous of their declared rights to decide who should enter their country and what they should pay for the privilege ; but two hundred and fifty well-armed men in tight formation carried their own safe-conduct , and they rode through without challenge .
11 Although it sought to make schools accessible , it also held that attendance at them should be voluntary , that pupils should pay for the instruction they received , that public education should be developed gradually rather than immediately , and that , although schools would still be run by different agencies , societies and private individuals , they should teach the same things and be managed identically .
12 Measures that drive up the costs of waste disposal may appear to fulfil the principle that polluters should pay for the dirt they create ; but they also encourage waste to end up where it should not .
13 She would have to have some money to support it , and it was only right he should pay for the pleasure he 'd had .
14 Many developing nations argue that since the industrialized countries are the world 's main polluters , they should pay for improvements in the global environment ; and since they are rich , they should pay for the transfers of technology necessary for the developing countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions , stop deforestation and carry out other changes .
15 This stipulates that a polluter should pay for the repair of environmental damage .
16 Could we just quickly , who should pay for the training of the trustees , employer or the trust ?
17 However , there seems no reason why creditors should pay for the costs of the Certificate .
18 The policy question is how far families should bear the burden themselves and how far the state , through social security , or otherwise , should pay for the costs of disability ( see Chapter 14 ) .
19 ‘ Someone must pay for the Privilege of having me spend valuable time in directing the operations of bone-headed policemen like you !
20 Oh it 'll pay for a bit of the ferry but has , has no one approached the unions ?
21 If you 've an idea , however brief , send it to us ( enclosing a diagram wherever possible ) at : We 'll pay for every idea we use .
22 ‘ I 'll pay for the call of course . ’
23 They will pay their Poll Tax , they 'll pay for their electricity , they 'll pay for their water , they 'll pay for the sewage disposal and , what is more , they will pay rent .
24 I 'll pay for the tape .
25 ‘ Okay , then , I 'll give it a go if you 'll pay for the diesel and if I can see you Saturday night . ’
26 ‘ I 'd pay for a cup of wine and I have dice , though I would love to know the finer points of the game ! ’
27 He gave me £30 a week and I 'd pay for the bills , £12 rent , £5.50 for two bags of coal and the rest went on food .
28 Cos really that 'd pay for the girls ' nightshirts .
29 ‘ I could pay for a hotel , of course , but he 'd find me . ’
30 A 10 per cent cut in defence spending could pay for a doubling of development assistance ( which stood at $51,000 million in 1988 ) , while increasing aid to the target level of 0.7 per cent of gross nation product ( GNP ) would raise assistance flows to $144,000 million by 2000 .
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