Example sentences of "[adv prt] for the [noun] at " in BNC.

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1 The you so pointedly admonished is the addressee of the poem , Torquatus , a representative Roman , fictionally standing in for the reader at large .
2 This may mean that he had remained in the region when the court set off for the midlands at the end of June .
3 This may mean that he had remained in the region when the court set off for the midlands at the end of June .
4 The man giggled — a horrible noise — before setting off for the curtain at the back of the room .
5 Through the Sound of Grunay , ever threading through a procession of rock islets and on to the northernmost island of Unst , where we tied up for the night at the little pier in Baltasound .
6 The local police kindly agreed to come in on the act and a few off-duty policemen pretended to stalk the burglars and locked them up for the night at a disused police station at Ironbridge !
7 Finally that evening the engine pulled into Maidstone where they disembarked , and were put up for the night at the local barracks of the Royal West Kents .
8 GARY ARMSTRONG will take another giant step towards reviving his Scotland career when he lines up for the Barbarians at Leicester on December 28 .
9 ‘ And if I have to pay up for the Mercedes at £1 a week for the rest of my life then that 's what I will do . ’
10 This affluence was made possible not only by higher wages ( in real terms ) but because new mass markets in non-essential goods were also opened up for the population at large .
11 The occasion is the 25th birthday of the U-K owners club and around half of its 1,300 active members have turned up for the celebrations at Silverstone .
12 If your child has recently been told he 's diabetic , watch out for the comic at diabetes clinics , or by contacting Ames Division , Miles Ltd , Stoke Court , Stoke Poges , Slough SL2 4LY .
13 As I was saying , if the Labour Group would like to leave the chamber we do n't really mind , if they stay out for the voting at the end of this debate which actually contrary
14 He usually turned out for the Palace at right-back and was the composed and effective successor to the brilliant Arthur Hudgell , epitomising the honest footballer who would always give of his best for his club whatever the situation .
15 Most people are ready to go out for the evening at that time , ’ laughs Ted .
16 Watch out for the credits at the beginning of the programme : I 'm willing to bet my next season 's average that the batsman hitting the ball out of the ground will be Australian , while the batsman being clean-bowled by Merv Hughes 's moustache will be English .
17 His head cleared at his second , where he thrashed two drivers on to the green , while he went to two under for the day at his fifth , the short 14th , where he hit a seven-iron to 7ft .
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