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

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1 Although no evidence of his activities before 1643 survives , we know that by then he had married , had established a house and warehouse at Leadenhall Street , and had brought over many of his relatives to work for him in England .
2 The suit had been tailored for him in London , at a cost of some one hundred and fifty guineas — not by Edouard de Chavigny 's own tailors , Gieves of Savile Row , but by another man who could do a cheaper , and passable , imitation .
3 All Ruritania is waiting for him in Strelsau and Black Michael with half the army , too .
4 He said he had been assured that a hospital place was waiting for him in Leicestershire .
5 We prayed for him in June .
6 Lands to the value of 300 marks were found for him in England , but half the endowment was found by persuading Guy de Blois , another French hostage , to surrender to Edward the County of Soissons , worth 500 marks a year , which Edward then granted to the new Earl of Bedford .
7 ‘ Fights will be found for him in England and elsewhere in Europe , ’ Warren is quoted as saying .
8 As no temporary accommodation could be found for him in Štanjel my parents gave him a room in our house ; his family joined him there when we left .
9 Back in Ockleton 's rooms at Breakspear , seated by a roaring fire and sipping finer port than he could ever recall tasting , he had asked Ockleton to explain his reaction earlier to Harry 's revelation that Alan Dysart had once worked for him in Swindon .
10 It waited for him in Zürich , Poshekhonov would say , the pay-off .
11 They must have felt they had secured his future when a Treasury pension of £50 per annum was obtained for him in April 1766 , but his letters continue to reveal his financial anxiety .
12 The English form requires the applicant to specify the name of an English solicitor to act for him in England .
13 I never buy I never buy for him in Marks 's .
14 One of the necklaces — a collar of Byzantine magnificence — had clearly been influenced by the classical revivalist designs of Fortunato Castellani , and his pupil Giuliano , whom his great-grandfather had once tried to woo into working for him in London .
15 Since coming to Leeds from Lincoln City for £500 in 1906 , McCleod had scored 117 League goals in more than 200 games by the time a benefit match was held for him in April 1913 .
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