Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [verb] [pers pn] for [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | He says he 's now firm friends with the doctors who prepared him for freedom . |
2 | Search consultants joining companies who hired them for search : |
3 | He had time to have a word with everyone and on the occasions when I met him in England he was more than helpful — unlike some of his colleagues in the Press room who pestered you for information when at Leopardstown , then pretended you were from another planet when you went to a big meeting in England . |
4 | Therefore , it 's rather ironic that one of the clubs who pipped them for promotion to Division I , West of Scotland , reckon the very reason they are going up is down to their New Zealand lock , Gordon McPherson . |
5 | But they met their match in Ryde School from the Isle of Wight , who pipped them for victory . |
6 | NORMALLY I insist on using the names of people who contact me for help , but in this case I am making an exception . |
7 | Once I did this under the eye of a policeman who nabbed me for parking on a yellow line when I emerged from the bank a few minutes later . |
8 | Moreover , if shipper A entrusted his goods to faithless agent B who shipped the goods , obtained an ‘ order ’ bill of lading and endorsed it to C who acquired it for value and in good faith , A could not replevy the entrusted goods from C. A bank then , could be assured that it would become an ‘ absolute purchaser of goods upon deposit with it of [ a ] draft and bill of lading … [ and would acquire ] absolute title to property , unless it took with notice of some infirmity . ’ |
9 | She 's the one who did it for money |
10 | And who bought them for Mummy ? |
11 | He 's multiple in disability , but we get help in Kilmarnock from Salvation Army , who take him during the day , FAB club where I go with him at night , and the hospital , Curtlingside now , who take him for respite social and everything . |
12 | Called after the man who invented it for research purposes . |
13 | These were taken by local retailers , who accumulated them for exchange against larger bills drawn on London . |
14 | Petition-drawers and outdoor proctors were often regarded with distaste by officials , some of whom blamed them for fostering perjury and false cases . |