Example sentences of "[noun] were for the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The first lots to come into the ring were for the annual lease of ewes . |
2 | Founded in 1925 , the Review is in many respects a source as appropriate to this phase as the English Association and the Newbolt Committee were for the earlier period . |
3 | Demands for licences grew steadily during the fourteenth century , but endowment of the religious orders never regained its earlier level , and alienations were increasingly directed to the establishment of chantries and secular institutions ; by mid-century almost as many licences were for the secular as for the religious churches , but this has more to do with declining enthusiasm for the vastly endowed monastic orders and the growing popular appeal of the mendicants who lived from alms , and not from farming extensive estates . |
4 | Helmets and unbelted tunics were for the despised ‘ county men ’ , ‘ those sheep-dippers up the road in the sticks ’ whom we continually used to reassert our own status by looking on them as ‘ hicksville country cousins ’ and definitely not ‘ real polises ’ . |
5 | An interpreter said later : ‘ The prayers were for the Royal Family and the prince and princess themselves . |
6 | Now the depot office the they in those days controlled what a man 's duties were for the next day and a man did n't know what he was on until about twelve o'clock one day what he was on the next day . |
7 | As the Vice-chairman , who was re-elected , was also deaf , the two elected leaders of the BDA were for the first time deaf . |
8 | Plain hospital beds with flock mattresses laid on interlaced wire springs were for the junior members of the staff . |
9 | These ‘ composite ’ boats were for the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company . |
10 | Secretly , under layers and wads of protest , was her admission that he was right , that these things were for the best . |
11 | The local transmissions of the External Service were for the many expatriates working in the country who understood little or no Swahili . |
12 | These figures were for the cold season ; the second half will be much better . |
13 | And the new tears were for the absolute tenderness she had seen in his eyes . |
14 | As his Latin epitaph on the title page announced , Jonson Workes were for the select few , not only serious readers but also affluent and socially well-positioned readers . |
15 | So far as the privately rented sector was concerned , the government 's proposals were for the automatic decontrol of all dwellings with a rateable value over £40 in London and over £30 in the rest of England and Wales . |
16 | Sommerfrische and Kurort were for the normal bourgeois ; traditionalist France and Italy still confirm today that annual liverishness was a bourgeois institution . |
17 | of the records were for the third week of September . |
18 | of the records were for the last week of April and the first two of May . |
19 | This demand was indeed radical since women were for the first time trying to achieve some independence as persons and to exercise some power as individuals in their own right . |
20 | Women were for the first time identified in their own right as potential land reform beneficiaries . |
21 | Despite the Party programme and frequent reiteration of the line , the record in practice seemed appalling — ranging from the Russian colonists , operating under the banners of Soviet power and universal freedom ; the arbitrary and cruel behaviour of raw troops operating in alien lands and in danger , far from the watching eyes of Moscow ; the role of former Tsarist officers whose instincts were for the patriotic defence of all the territories of the former empire , without concession to local nationalism ; to the contempt of the Bolshevik ultra-Left for all forms of nationalism . |
22 | The fact that all the workshops in WA and at least half of those in Victoria and New South Wales were for the double bed , shows the quality of knitters involved . |
23 | All this depended on the fact that the Romans were for the first time in the law of succession experiencing an ‘ open ’ system . |