Example sentences of "[adj] for the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Interest will be charged at the rate of 1 per cent above the Bank base rate prevailing for the relevant period .
2 We would levy the charge at 1 per cent above the Bank base rate prevailing for the relevant period .
3 Thankfully she made a quick and full recovery , and was outstanding for the Irish Under-21s at last month 's Home Countries Championships .
4 Seen here at Dean Martin 's facility at Burlington , Vermont , is the first of the L38Cs due for the Black Hawks team .
5 May 1995 Elections are due for the new authorities
6 She said yesterday that it was not profitable for the new trust members to speculate on why the Scottish Office had not appointed a member of the medical school .
7 X. Ray 's unshowy steadiness was right for the low time in which he newly found himself — he could put the fire out .
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 We liked this little scene for the corner of a patio : the cane chair is just right for the simple planting around it and extra interest is created by using a large limestone boulder , gravel and creeping plants such as thyme .
10 ‘ But at the time , I did n't think the four years I had spent at Westminster Hotel School , learning to make classic garnishes , was right for the Golden Egg .
11 But I like Danny Bascombe , and I believe he 's right for the changing face of Barbados .
12 On the major question of the legal basis for pension schemes in the future , Mr. Murphy said ‘ The Working Party consider that the principles of trust law appropriately updated , continue to be valid , but we think it would be right for the central principles of trust law to be re-stated and put into the context of pension schemes .
13 The Junior Gaultier collection presents his ideas with more of a sportswear or street feel , more for club-goers and it 's just right for the new designer room we have opened at our branch at 362 Oxford Street in London . ’
14 The time was right for the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition to do so today , but they did not .
15 Aristotle was right for the wrong reasons .
16 In a recent article in Current Anthropology , one palaeontologist went even further and stated that the molecular anthropologists were right for the wrong reasons , while the palaeontologists were wrong for the right reasons .
17 What was good enough to contain Al Capone , he could then assure the Prime Minister , should be right for the English yob .
18 I do not think that it is right for the hon. Lady to knock the national health service in that way .
19 It is clear from earlier research that each school has to work through , to an extent , what is right for the particular people involved and that there will be ups and down .
20 Not the equipment manufacturer because he is interested in the commercial aspect of selling his own equipment whether it be right for the particular job or not .
21 It is rich for the hon. Member for Dagenham to claim that he is worried about the complexity of our proposal ; that from the hon. Gentleman who suggests that there should be property valuations on four different bases and annual rolling revaluations on a banded basis — although he keeps rather quiet about it .
22 it 's not uniformed for the whole sentence
23 Alternatives to this usually provide only a palliative for the rural transport problem .
24 Drawing on an analysis of American inter-organizational relations Lindblom argues that it is simply not possible for the central state to impose its wishes on the local state .
25 Is it possible for the net return to capital to rise ?
26 Is it possible for the ordinary man in the street to become confident and competent in handling a computer system , whether it be in his office or in his home ?
27 It is of course possible for the unpaid seller to re-sell the goods in circumstances where he has no right to do so .
28 It should always be possible for the salaried partner to rely on the nature of his subordinate position to claim to be entitled ( at any rate by necessary implication ) to an indemnity from the full partners in respect of any additional liabilities to which his being held out has exposed him : but as a matter of good practice , every would-be salaried partner should insist on written terms which clarify his standing in the firm and effectually indemnify him against extraordinary expenses and liabilities .
29 Because none of these emotions is overtly expressed it is always possible for the offending partner to act the innocent and deny any hidden meaning .
30 Make it possible for the other person to change what they do .
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