Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [adv] for [art] " in BNC.
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1 | However , it should be recognised that while it is possible to analyse costs retrospectively to the individual patient , it is not possible to plan prospectively for the individual patient . |
2 | I have little to report here for the station is closed . |
3 | If England were to decline to tour India on the grounds of safety , other countries might not be so willing to visit there for a one-day jamboree . |
4 | This happened only for the deeper intervals and also had the effect of nearly destroying the core . |
5 | Do some work occasionally for the theatre , the Concert Spirituel and the Concert des Amateurs , and now and then have something engraved par souscription . |
6 | Again , this worked well for a while . |
7 | That , as pressure groups , they are free to campaign openly for the changes , Mrs Whitehouse accepted . |
8 | This accounts partly for the vast success of ‘ Made in Italy ’ . |
9 | And there seemed an almost endless queue of freighters , tankers and oreships waiting in the roads at each end , some at anchor , some jostling politely for the lock entrances . |
10 | The West Germans were prepared to pay handsomely for the right to emigrate of hundreds of thousands of German-speaking Romanian citizens whose ancestors had lived in the country for centuries . |
11 | If a firm is operating in a good , competitive market then , notwithstanding the problems associated with accounting measurements , profit does give an indication of how well it produced goods : the market was willing to pay more for the finished goods than it cost the firm to produce them , if the firm made a profit . |
12 | Some carried enough for a family . |
13 | This made him easier to take home for the night ; people who would normally never have approached such a beauty felt that they could . |
14 | While the English waited patiently for a fetch to appear , as a summons for mortals to proceed to the grave , it is interesting to note that the word was adapted by the Portuguese as fetisso ( magician or oracle ) , and involved a concentrated worship of idols to determine the future , including the time of death . |
15 | Coordinators of education management courses interviewed spoke of the difficulty this poses both for the curriculum balance of courses and for the image of the arts as a serious concern of education . |
16 | Article 12 provides separately for the circumstances in which the execution of a letter of request may be refused , namely , |
17 | This augurs well for the regions . |
18 | This augurs well for the future and should be reflected in some good team gala results this coming season . |
19 | This augurs well for the future and underlines the truth that music as a universal language is an important resource for ecumenism . |
20 | It is still the definitive cinematic story of the attack and , for all the commercial flaws of the film , it stands alone in technical accuracy and the actual attack scenes are among the finest put together for an aviation film . |
21 | That augured well for the day . |
22 | When one considers the proximity of Zurich ( so easy to go there for a show or a concert , have a meal , and arrive back home at a reasonable hour ) , the thriving variety of Winterthur 's night life is surprising . |
23 | There is a real feel here for a developing area of research , which avoids giving a misleading impression that the current state of the art provides any ultimate answers , handed down on tablets of stone from above . |
24 | James would probably have been content to live quietly for a time but both Mary and Louis were insistent on immediate action and his chief remaining ally in the British Isles , Richard Talbot , Earl of Tyrconnel , Lord Deputy and Commander-in-Chief in Ireland , wrote urging him not to settle into comfortable inactivity in France when Ireland offered a kingdom of his own ‘ plentiful in all things for human life ’ . |
25 | Does not that augur well for the home owner and the property market in 1992 ? |
26 | If we aggregate together everyone in that ‘ dependent ’ age group , i.e. , those below the age of 16 and above pensionable ages remembering the heaviest demands on services are made at each end of the age range , the percentage of dependants to total UK population has indeed remained remarkably stable throughout this century — 30 per cent in 1901 , 36 per cent in 1951 , 41 per cent in 1977 — and it is likely to remain so for the remainder of the century ; it is projected to be 40 per cent in 2001 ( Grundy , 1986 , p. 21 ; table 5.4 ) . |
27 | Would it not be a good idea if the airlines , when checking in passengers in those countries from which large quantities of drugs come to this country , were to hand each passenger a paper in his or her own language clearly explaining that if they bring drugs into the United Kingdom they are likely to be caught and , if they are caught , they are likely to go away for a very long time indeed ? |
28 | ‘ We heard the noise of glass falling to the floor and I saw this group of three heading straight for the door . |
29 | Apple Computer Inc chairman and chief executive officer John Sculley 's name has made it to the short list to be Secretary of Commerce in the Clinton Administration : if he takes the cabinet post , Apple 's likely to look outside for a replacement . |
30 | But Ball 's committee seems likely to press instead for a box which doctors should tick if they want a generic drug substituted . |