Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] for [art] very " in BNC.
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1 | The latissimus dorsi account for the very impressive ‘ V ’ shape of athletes and bodybuilders . |
2 | Well executed joiner work and solid timber nicely matched with face veneers of bulkheads make for a very pleasant ambience in the saloon . |
3 | So far we have been looking at the type of grave-clothes provided for the very wealthy . |
4 | It may also be equally true that disincentive effects operate for the very low and the low income-earners where any increase in earnings is counter-balanced — sometimes more than counter-balanced — by a corresponding loss of benefits . |
5 | Eleven tricks made for a very good score , as several other declarers had actually contrived to go off in the same contract . |
6 | I have in my own way tried to point out that , of the world 's leading rugby nations , the game in south Africa has suffered badly not only as a result of its years of isolation — as many of those who have just visited the country during the New Zealand and Australian tours believe — but precisely because our officials have for a very long time been at the forefront of the trend towards professionalism . |
7 | The fragility of most Early Netherlandish panels means that most museums will refuse loans save for a very good reason . |
8 | Large leaps make for a very jagged contour , and the total-chromatic is fairly evenly spread , though there is an occasional recurrence of small note-groups . |
9 | Launch failures account for a very high proportion of gliding accidents , making cable break practice a very important aspect of glider training . |
10 | However , with increasing store capacities and the presence of addressing mode fields , the use of three-address instructions makes for a very long instruction format , and the technique is not now used . |
11 | But then he had already had enough to keep him and many others occupied for a very long time . |
12 | It turns out that there are generally not enough dislocations originally present in most crystals to account for the very extensive slip which can take place in a ductile material . |