Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] them for [art] " in BNC.

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1 Finally , I read yesterday that some managers , most noticably the two Scots that were in Wembley at the weekend , are talking about banning transfers after the season start and only allowing them for a limited period over Christmas .
2 Yeah , but you can only buy them for a little while in the year
3 The bishops also argued that any so-called restricted form of divorce was impossible to maintain in practice and that divorce might solve the partners ' problems but only created them for the children .
4 I said if I 've got to do a dozen sausage rolls for one I 'd better do them for the others .
5 So watch them for a while and then he started dancing with them and he dance them all night and he just get in his hand .
6 Sometimes you could only have them for a day or two before passing them on .
7 When I first went , I thought I 'd only get them for a couple of weeks at the most .
8 ‘ I 'd rather be doing it on my own , ’ Maria responded waspishly , taking advantage of the fact that no one was near enough to overhear them for the moment .
9 The Scottish Typographical Circular reported of this conflict that " people are beginning to see that making women printers … will only unfit them for the active and paramount duties of female society " .
10 Evaluation returns from the 1990 cohort ( 2,966 ) shows that 96% of teachers and 93% of companies reported that briefings successfully prepared them for a placement , while 89% of teachers successfully met their placement objectives .
11 This suggests that something is amiss with the job definition and , by implication , also with education and training which does not prepare them for the reality .
12 His mother had not joined them for the meal , bowing in this regard to the T'ang 's wishes .
13 Paint and varnish slow down moisture changes in wood but they do not prevent them for no paint is impermeable to water vapour .
14 Your father , and Elizabeth and the others , are very worried about you , because you have not visited them for a long time .
15 Then , although I did not believe them for a moment , I stored them away in my memory against a rainy day .
16 But he was saying you see , what 's happened is the they is n't his he just delivers them for the bloke
17 I just needed them for a purpose , and that was enough . ’
18 A chocolate bar or an ice-cream , or sometimes he 'd just take them for a walk .
19 Just keep them for the telly then .
20 Other negatives were Gareth Burnells 's ‘ No , mate , I do n't think there 's any particular dispute over this stretch of the Derwent , ’ and Neil Newton Taylor 's ‘ No , we 're just taking them for a walk' ’ on a picture postcard of Cauldron Snout .
21 He gained his school colours for rugger and was unlucky not to get them for the Field Game and the Wall Game — another game confined to Eton .
22 She joined the Garter knights for a reception and lunch before the ceremony before deciding not to join them for the service at St George 's Chapel .
23 Why is it that those countries can accept basic , decent minimum standards for their people whereas this Government will not accept them for the British people ?
24 Apart from anything else , I ca n't help feeling that if women let men get away with too much bad behaviour , men do not forgive them for the burden of guilt they then have to bear .
25 Er I think they genuinely believe their case , it 's not a case that I believe , but I I 've always genuinely respected them for the case they take .
26 She could hardly thank them for the tears in her eyes .
27 In James Callaghan 's famous speech at Ruskin College , Oxford , in October 1976 , from which the Great Debate emerged , he spoke of a school curriculum which would aim ‘ to equip children … for a lively , constructive place in society , and also fit them for a job of work ’ .
28 In the second year , language work extends students ' oral and written skills , with increased attention to style and idiom , and also prepares them for the year abroad .
29 James Boswell , for example , often used them for the former , even occasionally , apparently , for the latter ; but never it seems with his wife .
30 There is an unconditional appropriation when the goods are identified and the third person acknowledges that he now holds them for the buyer , Wardars ( Import & exports ) v. W. Norwood ( 1968 C.A. ) .
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