Example sentences of "[verb] to pay for [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Mrs Thatcher will have to be satisfied with the assurances she will receive from Mr Bush , who will tell her that , since defence cuts are politically inevitable , it is far better for modest and planned reductions to be proposed by his cabinet and the Pentagon than for swingeing cuts to be imposed by the US Congress , which is already chafing at the thought of the US budget deficit being deepened to pay for the defence of the wealthy Europeans .
2 sole practitioners are expected to pay for the dishonesty of partners through their contributions to the Indemnity Fund ;
3 It seems odd that I should be expected to pay for the privilege of assisting in this way , in particular , as I doubt that these changes will alleviate the falling numbers of applicants to medical schools in the UK .
4 John , of Pontypridd , Mid Glamorgan , said yesterday : ‘ It was n't until I came to pay for a car at the auction that I realised what I 'd done .
5 He knew he was wealthy , set up for life , but he was already being made to pay for the taking of those lives : almost every night since , he had been troubled by dreams in which he found himself face to face once more with his victims .
6 The rest of the money was used to pay for a dinner at the Crescent Hotel .
7 Shell manufacture in Blundell Street car shed during the First World War : 200,000 shells were produced here , largely by female labour , yielding a profit to the Town of £16,000 , which was used to pay for the erection of the Cenotaph war memorial on Princess Parade .
8 The Cabinet approved a US$38,200 million budget for 1991 in late November which included tax increases to pay for the cost of immigration absorption .
9 As athletes prepare for the Olympics , sporting organisations are looking for big sponsorship deals to pay for the trip to Barcelona .
10 For example , who is going to pay for the process of assessment and the involvement of the various practitioners — social workers ; general practitioners ; hospital , paramedical , and housing personnel ; and so on ?
11 He said the Royal Mail had agreed to pay for the reprinting of the leaflets but it would be too late .
12 A presumed member of Hizbollah , Ali Mohamed Hariri , is in prison in Switzerland for the murder of a Frenchman on board an Air Afrique airliner during a hijack attempt which ended in Geneva in July 1987 — and Hariri 's release is said here to have been part of the price which the Swiss government secretly agreed to pay for the release of Peter Winkler , the Red Cross official who was freed in Sidon 10 months ago .
13 Well , on the news just now the speculation was that the dosh is needed to pay for the refurbishment of the ground and not for new players .
14 Laura was unable to have her transplant on the NHS so Fran and Les launched an appeal which raised the £350,000 needed to pay for the operation in the US .
15 Er there was a lady fell over about two months ago on that footpath just at the beginning of the winter , and the cathedral council offered to pay for the installation of a light and what we did we contributed seventy seven pounds which is sixty including V A T to enable a second light to be installed because of the two steps on that footpath , one at each end , erm
16 Remember though you will have to pay for the meter to be installed .
17 He would have to pay for the policing of that out of this year 's money .
18 That junior may have to pay for the victory with a heavy defeat in the future .
19 At present local NHS services do not have to pay for the care of individuals in Regional Secure Units or Special Hospitals ; they can shuffle off their responsibilities by claiming to have no suitable facilities and , in any case , such people receive little public support or sympathy .
20 But , while social programmes continue to pay for the largesse for defence , scientific research and development has been spared .
21 When my father died , his brother Perry generously undertook to pay for the education of Brian and myself .
22 If trams no longer had an obvious technological advantage they also suffered from an institutional disadvantage-of having to pay for the upkeep of the roads they used , up to a distance of 46 cm ( 18 inches ) either sides of their tracks literally paving the way for motor buses .
23 1.2 The Distributor hereby agrees to pay for the Licence in accordance with the price and terms agreed and to comply in all respects with the terms of this Agreement and as defined in the attached schedules .
24 1.2 The Distributor hereby agrees to pay for the Licence in accordance with the price and terms agreed and to comply in all respects with the terms of this Agreement and as defined in the attached schedules .
25 1.2 The Distributor hereby agrees to pay for the Licence in accordance with the price and terms agreed and to comply in all respects with the terms of this Agreement and as defined in the attached schedules .
26 The main complaint was that Microsoft offered large discounts to PC makers who agreed to pay for a copy of MS-DOS or Windows for every machine they sold , whether or not it was actually loaded with one .
27 A compromise was eventually negotiated in which the space to the west of the building , originally planned as a garden , was devoted instead to a car park and to compensate for this loss of amenity , the Historic Buildings Council then agreed to pay for the provision of the jetty and roof garden .
28 With a rolling network we would have been there live to provide them with information of direct concern to all their lives — people , incidentally , who could not afford to pay for a service from any other source .
29 The charity continued to pay for the schoolmaster in Saltash , who fulfilled certain conditions , the sum of £6. 17s. 2d. per annum up until 1875 , when the school , run by a Mr. Williams , closed down .
30 The grave prospect is that as German interest rates rise to pay for the reconstruction of the East , so our interest rates will be dragged up further .
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