Example sentences of "[adv] [vb pp] [adv] for [det] " in BNC.
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1 | It presupposes that that is right that those boundaries have been rightly drawn essentially for all time . |
2 | A large sketchbook especially put aside for this project allowed me to work freely , and clear my head of the fact that I was working to a commission . |
3 | Beresford came under almost non-stop pressure for the final hour of the match but was only beaten once for all Huddersfield 's domination . |
4 | ‘ I think we can do better than that , ’ he returned smoothly , and , making her heart spurt with activity again , ‘ I 've merely returned home for some papers . |
5 | No , but , you , you see what I 'm trying to get at eh Chris , we 've already paid once for this service and then , then asking us to pay again , which annoys me , you 've already paid for the system and there asking you to pay again . |
6 | And the ground is more intensively used perhaps for that ? |
7 | He and I do not perhaps instantly fit into the standard parliamentary stereotypes of the steady old stallion and the keen young foal who are usually harnessed together for this occasion . |
8 | The proliferation index was also calculated separately for each of five compartments of equal size into which each crypt column was divided . |
9 | The duration of contraction was also measured separately for each level in the same way . |
10 | The 14-bed Ward 5B is now used exclusively for this type of treatment . |
11 | The 14-bed Ward 5B is now used exclusively for this type of treatment . |
12 | At festivals she went back home and often stayed away for several days , despite the knowledge that her late return would meet with an endless round of angry curses . |
13 | In the middle ages the lord of the manor was regarded as legally responsible for the relief of the poor and one-quarter of the church tithes were also customarily set aside for this purpose . |
14 | The muddle and rush were greater even than at Reading , and we were often kept there for some twenty minutes . |
15 | But it might well be thought that if a procession has been regularly held even for such a comparatively short period of time , the police are aware that it is likely to take place , and it is therefore outside the rationale behind the advance notification requirement . |
16 | Weaker than the last , it holds that beliefs given us as ‘ data ’ are never fully justified merely for that reason , but that all such beliefs are already partially justified , quite apart from any further support they may receive from other beliefs . |
17 | Thus in a case in 1969 , where the 10-year-old child born in England of Spanish parents had been very unhappy during the seventeen months he had spent with them in Spain , and had then lived happily for several years with foster parents and their six children in England , the court refused to make an order that care and control should be granted to the parents , one of whom was in poor health . |
18 | Provost John Cuningham , as leader of his party in the council of Inverkeithing , was well aware of political realities and accordingly pressed strongly for some support from his patrons , particularly in the case of the well-known John Main . |
19 | The training of the vernacular clergy had been in the hands of Arthur Dilworth , the first time that a missionary had been completely set aside for this important task . |
20 | I felt a little ashamed that I had never cared enough for any of my father 's relatives to give even a thought to their reactions to the prospect of an irregular addition to the family . |
21 | Discordant twin pairs with either ulcerative colitis or Crohn 's disease , in whom data were available for both twins , were therefore analysed further for both inflammatory bowel disease categories ; no significant differences in subclass proportions appeared between healthy and diseased twins ( Tables II and III ) . |