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

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1 As a non-physicist I have often wondered if the difference in photon energy ( E' — E = hf' — hf ) of the shifted and unshifted light could be wholly accounted for by the effect of the surface velocity ( v ) acting together with the particle equivalent mass of the photon .
2 The pickups are Bartolini 's 1C models , although let me stress once again that all personal preferences will be gladly catered for at the Moon workshop .
3 Until then however , Harbert warned , elderly people would be inadequately cared for at great cost to the taxpayer .
4 any possible specific solvent-polymer interactions which might lead to orientation of the solvent molecules in the vicinity of the polymer chain are neglected i.e. polar solutions may be inadequately catered for by this theory ;
5 The merest traces of various gases exist at the surface of Mercury , amounting to about 10 12 times less than the mass of the Earth 's atmosphere and which can be entirely accounted for by capture from the solar wind and by the radioactive decay of certain isotopes in the surface materials .
6 While the planned closure of both Digby and Exminster did mean some transitory inter-hospital transfers , both the chronic long-stay population and elderly people with dementia were considered to be better cared for in the community .
7 Every tiny improvement has to be fiercely fought for in the fields of housing , education and social pleasure .
8 The figures suggest that the crisis of 1987 which precipitated the Prime Minister 's Review was the result of cumulative underfunding throughout the 1980s which could not be sufficiently compensated for by internally generated savings and efficiency improvements .
9 The general position remains one of fragmented concern ; years of relative neglect of this group can not , of course , be easily compensated for by debate and good intentions .
10 The increased sensitivity of cattle stealing to hardship may be largely accounted for by the fact that at this time more cattle stealing was carried out casually , mostly for immediate consumption as beef .
11 I mean I can remember the nineteen twenty , I I were n't sure whether it was the twenty one or the twenty six strike , and my father was erm on strike , you see , but the ponies had to be thus cared for in the field an I do n't think he received any pay and I remember very well erm going to the , my father applying for relief , and er we had to go and face the erm Court of Referees .
12 through such international organs and procedures as may be specially provided for in the treaty or in any other treaties or instruments in force .
13 In apoR2 the charges of the four acidic residues forming the metal site can be partly compensated for by protonation of the two former ligands His118 and His241 .
14 The richness of the Malesian flora , for example , may be partly accounted for by the Laurasian elements in the lowland rain forest and the Gondwana elements in the heath forest and in montane communities .
15 First , general interference can be automatically tested for on the system by simply considering the relationship between respective part bricks .
16 Once again , returning to part ( a ) in Fig. 10–5 , there will be no deviations from the equilibrium value of the real wage rate : any price changes will be appropriately compensated for by wage changes and individuals will be employed producing level of output , irrespective of the price level .
17 It is argued that this difference may be partially accounted for by the higher standard of living in Sri Lanka , but also that the motives and social composition of offenders in normal times were such that depressed economic conditions did not necessarily lead to substantial increases in criminal activities .
18 This measure was important , first , because it was the first extension from the field of schooling into that of welfare of the principle that a publicly-financed benefit could be granted to those in need , free both of charge and of the disabilities associated with the Poor Law ; second , it was a step towards recognition that parents were not necessarily culpable for the undernourishment of their children and that , with public support , needy children could be well cared for at home and did not require withdrawal into public or voluntary care .
19 The paraconductivity data for K 3 C 60 and Rb 3 C 60 can be well accounted for by assuming an effective dimensionality D=3 .
20 His physical needs may be well catered for at the moment .
21 Any job that could be fully prepared for in advance is , by definition , a job that could be exported to a low-wage country or programmed into robots and computers ; a routine job is a job destined to disappear .
22 Can justification , the putting of sinful man right with God , be fully accounted for in these same terms ?
23 The so-called ‘ ambiguities of scope ’ can be included in this category ; although they are often lexically restricted , they can be fully accounted for in terms of ‘ what goes with what ’ .
24 Hence the normality of 42 when the dogs referred to are of opposite sexes can not be used as evidence against the existence of two senses of dog , since it can be fully accounted for by claiming that only the general sense is operative .
25 One of the reasons why the government seems able to sidestep a real assault on health inequalities is its belief that many observed differences in health status can not ‘ be fully accounted for by … factors such as socioeconomic groupings . ’
26 Generally though , if the member is to be bound by future rule changes , this must be specifically provided for in the contract terms .
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