Example sentences of "[vb past] [pers pn] [art] [noun sg] for " in BNC.

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1 Their tactical naivety and non-dynamic ‘ donkeys-and-backs ’ approach made them no match for the super-fit ‘ new age ’ stars from Down Under .
2 There was the lure of the big stores , though clothing coupons and shortage of money made them a feast for the eye only .
3 The conduct of the foresters made them a by-word for oppression and extortion .
4 He rang up the hospital and got me a bed for the next week .
5 Though I had never been hurt like this before , strangely enough I bore him no resentment for these beatings , accepting them as the penalty for what I had done .
6 If you had a stomach upset you were sent to Mrs. Sutton who sold you a powder for tuppence .
7 George pointed wordlessly to an immense tank of water and with amusement showed me the system for telling the quantity of the contents .
8 Leonard Smithers paid him a salary for producing translations .
9 Soon after Walter Luff 's arrival as Transport Manager in 1933 , Marshall showed him the design for the new railcoach , which fitted exactly the requirement for the Promenade and Fleetwood route .
10 At a meeting , our ward councillor Mr I. Hartley informed us the reason for this decision was because it was not viable .
11 When the Access people billed him , he bunged them a wedge for £1000 .
12 But he owed me a favour for a little job I 'd done him and I needed somewhere to stash my passport , emergency cash and one or two other goodies .
13 I never realised Chris owed me a fiver for me wage and I says to him I had to pay me bill for me food for week and it was like six quid .
14 He taught her a position for sleeping that placed the forepart of her brain at the apex of a pyramid .
15 When the earl died without male issue in 1373 , he was taken on as a king 's knight by Edward III who , in addition to confirming the earl 's grant , awarded him an annuity for life of £50 .
16 It said Mrs Falati ‘ seems to feel that Mrs Mandela owed her a living for the rest of her life ’ .
17 ‘ Now you go to the same playgrounds and schools where people called me a fag for being an actor and everybody as a Screen Actors Guild card falling out of their pocket .
18 Unable to find one with the same outward-opening flap , he did the next best thing and took an average price for similar letter-boxes and forwarded you a cheque for this amount .
19 And although none of the critics called him a genius for playing in them , none argued about the extent of his talent either .
20 But going back to the 1944 triptych , you called it a base for the Crucifixion .
21 ‘ Dëkuji , ’ she tried out a Czech thank-you to the man on Reception who sold her a stamp for three crowns and assured her her card would catch that day 's post .
22 Then one time when he was doing some other business with the woman we called Mrs Howard , he sold her the story for a few marks .
23 Her forthright depictions of female passion made her a target for satire , most notably as Bridgetina Botherim in Memoirs of Modern Philosophers ( 1800–1 ) by Elizabeth Hamilton [ q.v. ] , and as Lady Gertrude Sinclair in Edmund Oliver ( 1798 ) by Charles Lloyd [ q.v . ] .
24 The three years stretching ahead seemed like a long time , then , worth buying a little house in Rummidge for ( Robyn 's father lent her the money for the deposit ) rather than paying rent .
25 His boyish good looks , his jet-black Beatle cut and the unusual film-star name which was a product of his Italian parentage , made him a magnet for instant attention .
26 Young and eager , he was well placed to capture the emergent UK rap scene , and his forthright personality also made him a match for America 's often egoistic rap stars .
27 Here Revelstoke was in his element ; acute intelligence and charm , capacity for meticulous work , presence and eloquence , fluency in French and Spanish , and , above all , financial acumen made him a match for the wiliest of South American presidents , North American railway barons , European finance ministers , and the members of the British cabinet with all of whom he had to deal at one time or another .
28 Dublin 's goals and aggressive style made him a target for several top clubs .
29 He accepted that his return made him a target for the IRA .
30 You made him a replacement for Judd . ’
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