Example sentences of "he [verb] [adv] for [art] " in BNC.

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1 A photographer from Spanish Cosmo tries unsuccessfully to get him to go outside for a shoot .
2 Well we 're gon na try get him to go out for a drink er one evening with that tape recorder so we 're gon na record the conversation on the side of that .
3 She said : ‘ Try and persuade him to come home for a special tea .
4 I ask him to come down for a few days and I also invite Lady De Marr .
5 ‘ Tell you what , see if you can persuade him to come down for an X-ray .
6 For the last hour his progressively alcoholised brain had reminded him of the consequences of justice ( small ‘ j ’ ) : of bringing a criminal before the courts , ensuring that he was convicted for his sins ( or was it his crimes ? ) , and then getting him locked up for the rest of his life , perhaps , in a prison where he would never again go to the WC without someone observing such an embarrassingly private function , someone smelling him , someone humiliating him .
7 So I had a er I got him set up for the morning jobs and then I did the afternoon jobs with him .
8 She could just imagine him closing in for the kill .
9 ‘ Good , Fox is on remand in Saughton , I 'll get him brought down for an ID parade , Strathclyde will bring Dalton through for us .
10 Do you think there 's any chance of him coming back for the opening of — ? ’
11 I felt him go off for a few seconds .
12 Does not he recognise that it is a broadly based representative body in which it was open to the Conservative party to participate and that for him to call now for a debate , once its work is completed , is extraordinary ?
13 When he fell ill in 1857 he was granted £30 to enable him to get away for the winter , and six months ' leave of absence shortly afterwards .
14 A curt note arrived shortly afterwards from Mauve , telling him to stay away for the next two months .
15 I ca n't see him sitting down for a quiet civilized three cornered discussion . ’
16 Our lawyer took the idea to the court , and the judge altered the terms of Rickie 's bail to let him come here for a therapeutic cruise .
17 You go to the most wonderful places , you STAND in Soweto outside Nelson Mandela 's little house and watch him come home for the first time in 25 years .
18 office place and give him a bag of plaster and tell him to plaster there for a day either that or send him up
19 This hooking action is important because it interferes with the opponent 's attempts to free his arm and keeps him closed off for a longer period .
20 When he came back from Livorno in the late summer of 1913 he made straight for the Café Rotonde , to be greeted rapturously by artists and models on the terrace .
21 He made straight for the big warhorse , mounted , said something to Will , and started along the street .
22 Noguchi tried in vain to construct an earthwork sculpture at a Japanese-American internment camp where he lived voluntarily for a time during World War II .
23 Collecting her ticket , she came up behind him again as he checked in for the flight .
24 He plunged down for an interminable second , arms and legs splayed out in abandon , forgotten , tumbling anyhow , and crashed onto the stage on his back , lying across Bothwell , whose cloak was the colour of blood .
25 He skips over for the bloody
26 And he waxes portentously for a moment .
27 He has received a card with drawings of gangsters on it and threats of a ‘ warm welcome ’ if he turns up for the second-round tie .
28 Stage shows made Leonard Bernstein a very rich man , but he said he cared little for the money , his great love was for the music .
29 Friends say he cared deeply for the countryside and worked tirelessly to improve the public rights of way network through his job as footpath officer for the Richmondshire group of the ramblers ' association , which he helped to start .
30 He goes in for a sort of hall-of-mirrors self-impersonation , telling people how he would have done the murder if he had done it ( which he has ) .
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