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

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1 ‘ I like the walrus best ’ , … ‘ because he was a little sorry for the poor oysters . ’
2 I felt a little sorry for the old fellow .
3 She 'd feel a little sorry for the little girl if she blacked out in the race and fell under all those hooves .
4 Central Council is most grateful for the generous support that has led to this successful outcome .
5 Death must represent one of the strongest impingements of reality , and perhaps the most confusing for the confused self .
6 Alix has always felt rather sorry for the poor competitive disappointed Ugly Sisters .
7 KEF 's nomenclature can be a little confusing for the uninitiated .
8 If a planning authority wished to restrict its activities , it was held that it was only right for the extra costs to be reimbursed .
9 Thus she was constantly grateful for the unfailing vigilance and support of her Chief Wren .
10 Leni had taken pity — more than pity — on the young woman who was so grateful for a friendly German voice and so bemused by the political carnival she had unleashed .
11 The trade was sufficiently profitable for the Portuguese to take over Sofala in the early sixteenth century , and their written accounts confirm that the export cargoes were brought to the coast by African representatives of the Shona king or monomutapa .
12 For the age range 14 and under 17 , prosecution is only possible for a limited number of offences on the authority of a magistrate , and the extended care , protection and control procedure is used in most cases .
13 Some authorities believe that a really delicate reaction is only possible for the domestic cat at up to 45,000 cycles per second .
14 Pauline , who always had back problems , felt so sorry for the little mare that she took her over from Jackie .
15 It appears entirely possible for a coronary artery to progress from one with hardly any narrowing to one which is completely blocked over a relatively short period of time ; and conversely , it is possible for a severe coronary stenosis to stay as a severe coronary stenosis without progressing for several years .
16 I think it is much healthier for a young artist to be treated like that , rather than told play this or that in a particular way .
17 The average age at which people marry remained more or less stable for the preceding two centuries until the end of the Second World War , when it began to fall , but there were notable changes in the pattern of childbearing , especially between 1870 and 1930 .
18 Mr Martinson was especially grateful for a modern medical process which may mean that his skin will repair without having skin grafts .
19 Higher notes may be reached in ff by good symphony-orchestra players , and are often found in big scores , but they are extremely risky for the average player and cause physical discomfort both to him and his audience .
20 To the extent that the technological success is not highly correlated with the returns on the market portfolio , the project is not so risky for a well-diversified shareholder .
21 Although the control of PGE in sheep is based on the same principles as that described for O. ostertagi in cattle , its practice is somewhat different for the following reasons :
22 If females are concentrated together then it is much easier for a single male to herd them and defend them from other males .
23 ‘ It should be very much easier for the elderly , people with pushchairs and those in wheelchairs to get along safely , ’ said Mrs Bosanquet .
24 It 's much easier for the young helper to do it all for you .
25 If it is , this will make it much easier for the creative people : if they can not actually find a typical individual customer , they can at least get a reasonably good idea of whom they are trying to reach .
26 This continuous appraisal helps to determine the prices at which securities are traded and makes it much easier for the institutional investors to reach a swift decision when they are invited to subscribe to or underwrite a new issue .
27 As the literature available was not entirely adequate for the new acceptance of the significance of human activity , the deficiency was remedied first by a series of collected readings ( Coates , 1972 , 1973 ) and Coates ( 1973 , p. 3 ) noted :
28 Works traditionally ascribed to the masters but considered by de Groot to be incorrect , have been omitted , for as the author stated : ‘ it is less unpleasant for the private collector to have his pictures passed over in silence than to have them mentioned and definitely described as false ’ .
29 Few could have been less suited for the military life than the historian Edward Gibbon who , as he admitted in his Autobiography , ‘ never handled a gun … seldom mounted a horse ’ but , living with his father , a country gentleman , at Buriton , near Petersfield , he felt obliged to apply for a commission as a captain in the South battalion of the Hampshire militia , 476 strong , of which his father became major and a local nobleman , ‘ after a prolix and passionate contest ’ with the Lord Lieutenant , lieut. -colonel .
30 I have n't enjoyed myself so much for a long time . ’
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