Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [pers pn] [vb base] for " in BNC.

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1 First their report was published as a booklet , ‘ Hire purchase and Credit Buying ’ , which gave factual information about the various methods and the legislation controlling them , their advantages and disadvantages and the dangers they hold for thoughtless or inexperienced people ; and also a leaflet setting out some of the points to be taken into account when undertaking hire purchase .
2 Erm , I work for Scottish Women 's Football and the plans we have for this year erm , shall hopefully encourage more women to come into the sport .
3 As an agency working in the field of community development , the past two years should have been optimistic ones for Falls Community Council , as new money pumped through BAT has been made available to us and the groups we work for and with .
4 In the hours you allocate for work , sort out your priorities , reordering them when unforeseen circumstances arise .
5 It means broadening our agenda and questioning the decisions on which it is based , the reasons we go for one story and exclude others .
6 the reasons I think for doing it .
7 Since the values for E and G vary , of course , for each solid the values we get for the theoretical strengths will vary too .
8 ‘ He is ideal because he is both a statesman and an artist [ he used to write rather stodgy plays ] , and we believe he shares the values we stand for , ’ says an ICA spokesman .
9 The titles you choose for essays you devise yourself can , if you want them to , be made closely to resemble the sorts of questions you are set as prescribed essays or in exams .
10 For April 6 is also the day when the over 60s will be eligible for tax relief on the premiums they pay for private medical insurance .
11 Over the long haul , my penis might be more of a curse than a blessing and it might fall short of the goals I set for it .
12 Packed with information on the animals we use for food , clothing , entertainment , transport or in scientific experiments .
13 It has been suggested recently by a press commentator that without the CNAA there would be no polytechnics , and undoubtedly if the Council did not exist some similar body would be necessary to give the new institutions the opportunities they need for their full development .
14 At present the opportunities they provide for cost cutting are more to the fore .
15 name name dropping the supporters I mean for to those Tories telling them that the that the association for county councils for example is a backer probably counts more than telling them that that is a backer .
16 There were none of the comforts we take for granted now .
17 I love the songs they write for me and I try to make it look that way in the style in which I deliver it , ’ she added modestly .
18 Anyway I 'm gon na bag some up for the kids you know for Christmas .
19 And what 's more , there 's no pressure to buy , no long term commitment to meet and a Red House ordering procedure that guarantees that you only ever get the books you ask for .
20 Yeah , well I suppose any , I mean if they go to London or Manchester or , or er I , I think they 're gon na produce something rather like th the books you buy for your kids when they 're young , you know .
21 Lack of money prevents us eating properly when we are children , ruins our health , rots our teeth , makes our parents quarrel and take to drink , stops us having the clothes we want , the friends we like , the parties we long for , stops us having the tuition which would enable us to get an education — makes us end up street sweepers and not doctors ; induces women to have babies because there is no money for travel or entertainment , or to leave the parental home any other way : lack of money humiliates us all our lives : lack of money makes us live with husbands or wives we no longer love : lack of money makes us age earlier than we need : makes our hands rough with toil and our brows creased with anxiety : keeps us weeping by day and sleepless by night : the terror in our lives is the bill through the door which ca n't be paid : our lives close in the knowledge of failure — we failed to make enough money .
22 Sometimes we come very close to the world outside , for example when we hear someone say the words we need for a piece of writing we 're involved in we commit it lovingly to memory so we can use it .
23 ‘ That 's the thanks I get for takin' ye out of a bloody hovel and givin' ye a proper place to live .
24 That 's all the thanks you get for slaving over a hot stove , ’ Mrs Cartwright shouted after us .
25 But now that computer animation looks so real , some advertising agencies are insisting that the images they pay For must look as if they have come from a computer .
26 Now it 's made the people , I have friends in Moscow , who are saying that they are losing a lot of their food supplies , because the West are taking the most throw down prices so that the Yugoslavs and the Romanians can get the goodies they want for us .
27 The sites they choose for nesting are the steep-sided inland gorges and cliffs formed by the rivers which rush down to the sea from the great ice-caps .
28 The experiences we organise for our learners vary according to the command of the language they have .
29 The latter approach places more emphasis upon the subjective states of individuals , their feelings , the meanings they attach to events and the motives they have for behaving in particular ways .
30 Ken , if we could er look at what 's actually happening out there to pensioners at the moment , I think of which we 're all very concerned , but there has been a small item of good news to balance against the concerns we have for those pensioners that are still suffering from uncertainty and that is some money has started to come in as a result of legal actions and settlements out of court .
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