Example sentences of "[pers pn] could [vb infin] for [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I wandered in a desultory fashion into the family room which looked dead without the fire blazing and began to wonder what I could make for dinner . |
2 | I could sit for hours on buses without worrying about how much time I was wasting . |
3 | Ex-presidential candidate Ross Perot told The Wall Street Journal he did n't mean he would take John Akers ' job when he told TV host Larry King that ‘ If there 's something I could do for IBM , well , I owe them that forever . ’ |
4 | This ‘ staff ’ he referred to was , of course , nothing more than the skeleton team of six kept on by Lord Darlington 's relatives to administer to the house up to and throughout the transactions ; and I regret to report that once the purchase had been completed , there was little I could do for Mr Farraday to prevent all but Mrs Clements leaving for other employment . |
5 | So is there anyone out there that has a similar machine that is now ‘ surplus to requirements that I could cannibalise for parts ? |
6 | So I could have for instance thirty two tape devices running in parallel to back up my database . |
7 | You 'd be independent and I could babysit for Maggie . |
8 | I could sue for slander . ’ |
9 | To him at least I could turn for assistance . |
10 | I asked if I could wait for Frankie but Mum , who I 'd thought was asleep , piped up at that . |
11 | ‘ I could wait for dark , bypass the current in the fence , climb over , sneak up to the house , stick a bug on one of the windows and hope they would n't see it . ’ |
12 | Liese explained how I could look for answers ; but first , silently , I had to formulate my question . |
13 | I could see for miles . |
14 | The evening ‘ tide ’ had gone out and I could see for miles . |
15 | With more hair she could pass for Springsteen being playful in the dark . |
16 | She could sit for hours in the sun these days , content to watch Pilade play , doing nothing whatsoever . |
17 | Yeah , she could go for Andy . |
18 | asked where she could pay for sex in London . |
19 | The murdering sun had dipped below the horizon , and this was the time when she could forage for food . |
20 | Mrs Lindo , however , had sworn that she could account for Drew 's movements up to 5pm that evening . |
21 | Pete suggested that in a few days ' time he could take her out to the nearest big town on the coast , and there she could look for clothes in the department stores and check out the library for the addresses of any useful organisations or people to contact . |
22 | Occasionally , he took his hand off the gear lever and reached out for hers , and sometimes he glanced towards her with a look so full of tenderness that she felt she could weep for joy . |
23 | Which was more than she could say for Uriah Colclough , a spare , already balding man in his mid-thirties who , having been torn all his life between a religious vocation and a natural Colclough desire to make money , lived like an industrialist but dressed like a vicar . |
24 | From the slight incline where she sat she could see for miles the neatly sown fields , the healthy crops and the spotless cattle . |
25 | She was to discover that she could see for miles from the attic windows — almost the whole of Bristol . |
26 | From its windows she could see for miles , across fields and trees to the aerodrome beyond . |
27 | She could see for miles . |
28 | Mrs Whitehouse , in turn , began to organise those organisations on whom she felt she could count for support . |
29 | She was murdered before she could call for help . |
30 | I would be grateful if you could arrange for clause two to be completed and initialled and the documents signed and returned to us for signature on behalf of the Press . |