Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun pl] for [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Whitelaw , concerned as ever to be the mediator , strove to find a middle way between Heseltine and those who did not want a penny extra for the cities for fear of being seen to reward rioters .
2 However , ‘ crime fighting ’ is not the sole task of the section police in Easton , for the calls for assistance to which they respond vary considerably in nature .
3 She says you must study for the examinations for Queen 's College in two years ’ time .
4 Spare Rib , May 1977 , reported that at the national Women 's Liberation conference , the Fifth Demand group ( for Financial and Legal Independence ) opposed the demand that ‘ every individual person , whether in or out of employment , should receive a Guaranteed Minimum Income as of right ’ on the grounds that ‘ it would amount to implicit support for the Wages for Housework Campaign ’ ( p. 11 ) .
5 to take responsibility for the arrangements for punishment in the community and providing services through contracts with other organisations .
6 what about the pantomime , I mean I do n't like to say this but there 's a society in Glasgow buying tickets for the children for pantomime
7 During the rituals for initiation into each successive age-set the ‘ true ’ meanings of certain sacred objects are revealed and it transpires that the interpretations given at the previous stage were false or partial .
8 More generally , Maud generated a climate for greater integration , something which became particularly appropriate during the preparations for reorganization when two major committees ( Bains for England and Wales , and Paterson for Scotland ) were established to advise on management structures for the new local authorities .
9 The first has concentrated on purely economic aspects , such as the incentives for innovation or diffusion , without considering what happens inside the firm to cause and implement change .
10 Such designations may be comprehensive in that the key villages are usually designated as the loci for growth in employment , services and housing .
11 There was never any real trouble , as the consequences for hooliganism in the G.D.R .
12 So , after all this , what do you foresee as the consequences for hip hop , Chuck Brown , Tashan , Alexander O'Neal ?
13 On the one hand , the empirical work has yet to incorporate many of the concerns that arise in the theoretical literature , as illustrated by the treatment of incidence ; on the other hand , many of the theoretical models are far removed from being empirically implementable , and leave out of account important factors ( such as the implications for production of the heterogeneity of labour ) .
14 Many other European firms are in trouble and some , like Volvo and Renault in 1990 , began to consider merging as the prospects for protection continuing beyond 1992 seem dim .
15 They try to maintain a rough balance across the liquidity range , but the precise composition of assets will vary as interest rates on the various assets vary , and as the demands for liquidity vary .
16 Here meditation is closely connected to what is read in terms of its retention in the memory as the grounds for prayer .
17 Laszlo Csaba , an economist at Budapest 's Institute for Market Research , predicts that trade will recover later in the year as the opportunities for profit overcome bureaucratic obstruction .
18 But brief mention of them will be made here as the opportunities for ward learning are so greatly enhanced by the provision of appropriate resources .
19 The ways in which events and acts come to have meanings attached to them which serve as the bases for action or inaction by regulatory agencies , and the negotiating tactics employed in securing compliance are central topics dealt with in Part III .
20 In what follows the exposition will focus not upon the general nature of rational expectations equilibria , but on the relation between the criteria for rationality on the one hand and the debate on the unemployment-inflation trade off on the other , with the ultimate aim of arriving at the policy inefficacy proposition .
21 Complete the curtains in the same way as above , having left larger spaces between the scallops for pleating , as calculated .
22 The 1530s , therefore , saw some tentative official moves towards religious reform , although they all reflected the tension between the forces for conservatism and those who looked for change .
23 There was no significant differences between the groups for consumption of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs ( miners 12.9% , population 16.6% ) , H 2 antagonists ( miners 6.7% , population 11.4% ) , or simple antacids ( miners 42.1% population 54.2% ) .
24 It should be stored on edge , with a single sheet of newspaper between the panes for cushioning , and never placed directly on concrete or stone floors .
25 Although this makes the rules more complex , on the whole the SFA have achieved a fair balance between the needs for investor protection and the need for an efficient futures market .
26 There are also important questions to be asked about the reasons for admission to residential care in the first place , for that in itself is an aspect of dependency .
27 Subjects will also be interviewed about the reasons for unemployment and about the kind of people who experienced unemployment .
28 As a result , it is not easy to arrive it conclusions about the reasons for population trends during the inter-war years .
29 This leads us to the composition and behaviour of sports crowds , especially at football matches and the current debate about the reasons for hooliganism .
30 They 've come along to talk about the Services for Industry programme , and what the University can offer local firms .
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