Example sentences of "about for [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Bill Wood of Durham called about it , desisted from hurling it in this direction and merely gave the fascinating information that it has been about for 1,500 years and started off in Anglo Saxon as sacleas , meaning ‘ without strife ’ . |
2 | You went out and about for twelve weeks with your tutor constable , if you like , they call it puppy walking he was the highly trained policeman and I was the new policeman , I was with him for twelve weeks . |
3 | I shall never feel the same about cosy coal fires again ; I have heaved too many buckets about for that . |
4 | ‘ I thought I 'd ring and congratulate you on managing at last to see what some of us have been going on about for all these years . ’ |
5 | On match days , there is an obvious problem — Eric is happily chasing about for all to see , so the desired mistaken identity is a non-starter . |
6 | Cos he , he 's , he 's only stood about for first hour anyway . |
7 | A common problem in geographical information systems ( GIS ) , and one which has been known about for many years in the context of choropleth mapping , is that of producing maps from population data aggregated over selected arbitrary areal units . |
8 | and would hang about for two or thr I mean when I was on the dredger them men would st they would come aboard the dredger and wait there , do nothing until the boat came up the river . |
9 | I was chronically frustrated by the city 's killing of time : all those coffees and slow pints , all that hanging about for other people . |
10 | There will also be some kind of performance boost for DB2 — either more microcode or conceivably the dedicated DB2 processor that IBM has been speculating about for 10 years now . |
11 | But the point is what I 'm saying is if we could get that stuff there on Friday afternoon and get the the conveyor set to where you want 'em , because I do n't know what leads you want the lorry got there on Monday morning , wants unloading , and we 're flying about for damn leads , we we 're gon na be in trouble . |
12 | During the garotting panic of 1862 , however , there was no such luck and it was therefore necessary to scramble about for alien pejoratives in order to disown this home-brewed violence . |
13 | You must go out on a starry night and walk about for half an hour trying to see the sky in terms of the old ( Ptolemaic ) cosmology . |
14 | We were hanging about for 19 hours altogether . ’ |
15 | THERE does not seem to be much good news about for any bulls in the advertising agency sector . |
16 | It was here that the dogs came into their own , casting about for any tell-tale scent that would betray the presence of a hidden bomb . |
17 | Both the NRC and the SPG and its equivalents had been known about for some time . |
18 | And this gentleman in West Yorkshire would certainly have the blessing of many if he carried out his idea : ‘ Having taken early retirement , I am casting about for some way to supplement my pension . |
19 | He recalls the efforts he made to acquire a p-38 : ‘ A Lightning that I had been pondering about for some time was owned by a chap called Merril Wayne , who ran an airline called Wayne Airlines up in Anchorage , Alaska . |
20 | Sources in the US say Data General will this week take the wrapping off the eight-way AViiON multi-processors it has been dropping hints about for some time ( UX No 389 ) . |
21 | After staring about for some time , they ran across to a little mound some way away and looked again . |
22 | He paced about for some time , looking agitated . |
23 | She stood with it in her hand , looking about for some signs of a waiting servant . |
24 | Bikers get more out of life , so climb down off your exercycle and get out and about for some fresh air . |
25 | I found myself looking about for steaming strangers . |
26 | But he admitted finding Minton 's facility suspect and thought ‘ the restlessness with which he is still casting about for fresh novelties of manner suggests a certain instability . ’ |
27 | No , they wo n't be moving away faster than light is travelling because the theory of relativity says that nothing can move faster than light , but there are certainly things which may be happening now which we shall not learn about for thousands of millions of years because they are so far away . |
28 | Standardization comes about for functional reasons , and its effect is to make a language serviceable for communicating decontextualized information-bearing messages over long distances and periods of time . |
29 | As she was poking about for more loot I glanced back at Granny and saw that the sheet had moved again . |
30 | NoS had mucked him about for more than a year . |