Example sentences of "[adv] be [adv] for [art] " in BNC.

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1 I used to do all sorts of other jobs to keep going — I used to be so confident that work was round the corner that when I became a cellarman in a wine shop , I said to my family , ‘ Of course , I 'll only be here for a week or two , you know , ’ and a year later I was still there .
2 As I would be , Caroline thought , if you 'd only be still for a moment .
3 ‘ I 'll only be there for a minute , Constance , to see that things are all right .
4 If she is severely disturbed emotionally , above the level normally expected in bereavement , and if she can not sleep , he may prescribe tranquillisers and a night sedative ; but this will usually be only for a limited period to help her over a particularly bad patch , as he will not want her to become addicted to these drugs , which if taken for too long may delay the normal grieving process which she will need to experience if she is to make a satisfactory recovery .
5 Aerospatiale and Socata have been there since 1911 and will probably be there for the next 80 years , whether they buy Piper or not .
6 But the Oswestry one I think , would probably be only for the , to be handled faster , because that one is likely to take place in existing erm , council owned er , units at whereas the one at Craven Arms will require the , the building of a business development centre at Craven Arms , on part of the , on part of the joint development site between district and county , and the Rural Development Commission .
7 He had not quietened down at all as he had grown older — far from it — and could not now be still for a single moment .
8 Instead of having to prove substantial fettering of competition , it may now be enough for the Commission to show that competition has already been weakened by the presence of the dominant undertaking and that some further action on its part would impede the maintenance or development of effective competition in ( or in a substantial part of the Common Market .
9 Among the points it made was that the Revival was ‘ simply the fruit of dilettante and antiquarian study ’ , and ‘ if thirteenth century architecture was so perfectly adapted to the circumstances of the day ’ , it can not therefore be so for the nineteenth .
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