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

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1 Oldfield himself asked Branson to carry on as his manager , which Branson agreed to do for a new rate — Oldfield would pay him one barrel of beer a year .
2 In 1916 he cited conscription and the suspension of trades union restrictions as things that coalition had done for the nation ; Gleanings and Memoranda headlined the speech " The Coalition Form of Government almost indispensable . "
3 Newton did n't have to be a scientist either to realise what his two goals had done for a Chelsea side which played with impressive self belief considering its young personnel .
4 That is the analysis Johansson has done for Sweden , and Reddy has done for the state of Karnataka , India .
5 Well you 're talking about that concert and what are you and Rhiannon going to do for the whole of the summer when you finish in June ?
6 It was very well presented and that whilst Billy Connolly freely admitted he was not in fact a culture vulture , it was his enthusiasm that in a sense having his own that make the programme apparently a complete and utter joy and in a sense that 's what sponsorship should do , it should do for art , music , ballet and opera what Cousteau and Bellamy have done for the environment and Attenborough
7 The key document circulated at the time was Raoul Vaneigen 's Totality For Kids which was hailed by its supporters as doing for the twentieth century what Marx had done for the nineteenth .
8 ‘ Japan is our biggest export market and we have seen what protectionism has done for the US automotive industry . ’
9 ‘ Local management of schools has done to education what opted-out hospitals has done for the NHS .
10 Another employer , in the 1890s , rationalized women 's lower pay as follows : " the difference between the rate paid to women and that paid to men is almost entirely swallowed up by the additional work which the men require to do for the women , viz. making up , correcting , carrying about formes between the stones and the proof presses , etc . " ,
11 Suddenly she was doing for silver-haired women of matronly stature what Joan Collins had done for the middle aged .
12 He knew what the Victorian churchmen of the north had done for the miners and how by the third quarter of the nineteenth century the Church was strong within the mining communities though it never took the place of the Methodists .
13 But concentrating all attention on the pus cells , as researchers have done for the past 20 years , is perhaps to miss the most important elements of process .
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