Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] [verb] [pron] for " in BNC.

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1 Although the first step can be steroid injections , my GP referred me for surgery at Wanstead Hospital , south London .
2 Well my mum got it for
3 Well my Mum done it for me .
4 Cos my mum bought one for my dad
5 Some adolescents seemed concerned about a lack of knowledge or deficiency in Creole on their own part : For my English oral , last year , I had to read a Patois poem , so I aksed my mum to read it for me , and that 's how I got to , you know , sort of pick it up just for that poem … kept letting her read it over and over again till I get the sound .
6 Then I said , or perhaps one of my voices said it for me , " I do n't know .
7 My friend bought it for two hundred pounds second-hand .
8 Her husband said , ‘ Wait one moment , Monsieur , my wife has something for you . ’
9 However , one day I my colleague attacked me for imposing my ‘ middle-class values ’ on the children because I had emphasized polite speech and decent manners in my sessions .
10 Do n't know how I got it when my Father got it for me .
11 My father bought him for me , ’ Artemis replied .
12 ‘ I should have recognised that you were a stronger character than that , and accepted your delight in the presents my father gave you for what it was — sheer , innocent pleasure . ’
13 If I present my ideas in writing , my father marks them for the appropriate offices …
14 Sometimes I would catch her looking at me with such intensity of feeling that my breath left me for a moment .
15 My father-in-law bought it for £26 , did it up and gave it to us for a wedding present in June 1969 .
16 The Head of Department replied that they were used mainly for the Sixth Form , for example , the History of Art' … my predecessor bought them for departmental use , but my belief is that kids should be actively involved in creative work , not passively looking at film — and we have difficulty with blackout , too'. ( verified note of meeting )
17 I just sat in the dressing-room with my head in my hands hating myself for what I 'd done . ’
18 ‘ In Andernesse I saw it , and sent my Women to fetch it for me .
19 If she wo n't let you I 'll help you and if neither of us can do it quietly we 'll call my master to do it for us .
20 For example , I have never received a personal letter following my stay to thank me for my custom .
21 For being the only male in my family to recognise you for what you are ? ’
22 Must have been the early 1940s , my mother taking me for a walk near Bostall Woods during a gap in the bombing .
23 ‘ No , my mother made it for me ’ , he replied .
24 My mother left them for me , although you realize I hardly knew her .
25 I came to Britain from Cyprus when I was six and , when I was 12 , my mother volunteered me for the job of interpreting for a pregnant neighbour who needed to talk to a doctor .
26 Usually perhaps there was a servant , but my mother did everything for us ii the house , made many of our clothes and mended them , prepared and gave us food , tended us when sick , comforted us when cold , disappointed , or sorrowful .
27 Here their superiors criticise them for failing after they have been given such brilliant training .
28 In which case forgive me for writing as I have done .
29 Then she asked her Mum to find something for me .
30 her Mum bought it for her er pure wool
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