Example sentences of "but for a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 But for a such railway treasure there is very little in the way of the written word to appreciate its importance of place of affection in the British steam fraternity .
2 On Sunday , the doors of the Old swan open at the ungodly hour of 10 a.m. , but for a new set of pint-sized customers .
3 The droid was motionless but for a cautious antenna trembling at its apex .
4 We will deal briefly with these in turn , but for a fuller account the reader is recommended to Walker ( 1975 ) .
5 Sure , you should buy the original albums , but for a substantial taster then this will set you back fewer readies than all ten Zeppelin LPs .
6 Sure , you should buy the original albums , but for a substantial taster then this will set you back fewer readies than all ten Zeppelin LPs .
7 It might be okay for Nutty and even for a weed like Hoomey with his crass infatuation for the hulking ex-chaser , but for a cool customer like himself it was out of character .
8 States parties may accede separately tot he convention and to the jurisdiction of the Commission and the Court , and they may do so not permanently but for a specific term on the expiry of which the accession will end .
9 Every technical device and dramatic trick was blatantly obvious this time through , and yet there was still a lot of delight , not from smug recognition of prize kitsch , but for a good yarn well told with the perfect characterisation of Albert Sharpe in the title role .
10 Fish and chips are a Northern favourite and always fresh here , but for a real treat go to Harry Ramsden 's at nearby Guiseley , said to be the largest fish and chip shop in the world — and , with its plush decor and chandeliers , a very chic chippie !
11 Time will tell whether collecting the alpine 4000ers will become as popular as Munro bagging , but for a real challenge , how about going for a complete set of 150 peaks and 4000m tops !
12 Theda 's gaze ran over the shadowed building , dark but for a faint glimmer behind one or two of the myriad windows , dismay flooding her breast .
13 According to their rhetoric , public morals were now not merely a job for the criminal law , but for a wide spectrum of social agencies .
14 Whatever the causes of construction delays , they were to remain a persistent and seemingly insoluble problem , not only for the electricity supply industry but for a wide range of other British industries embarking on such large capital projects for decades thereafter .
15 The engine may be be smooth , refined and flexible in its mid-range , but for a cross-country sprint it 's asthmatic .
16 But for a radical government committed to " rolling back the state " these changes , though controversial , were not large .
17 But for a maiden speech , by tradition , everyone keeps absolutely silent and no one is allowed to interrupt .
18 But for a goal-line clearance from Mason — O'Neill had met Crabbe 's corner with a firm shot — United would have led on merit at the interval .
19 All went well but for a small hitch .
20 There had been bad and costly muddles in the early days of the war ; agriculture had been disrupted by the number of peasants called to the colours , and eventually some had had to be returned to the fields ; the great Renault motor works was closed down , all but for a small shop making stretchers — motor vehicles evidently being considered a luxury with little application to the war effort .
21 It is a major handicap for thousands of people , but for a major star for whom flying is a way of life , it is a living nightmare .
22 Wordsworth continues to watch , but for a long time the figure refuses to move .
23 Probably the original intention was merely to contrast the procedure with that of a public inquiry ( where , of course , the inquiry is in full view of the public ) but for a long time the bogy of officials beavering away in private and then producing a report which damned some poor individual or organisation , without those officials being in any way accountable , was viewed with grave suspicion .
24 But for a long time , that was the only contact between us .
25 It seems an obvious assumption that these relatively simple organisms appeared very early in the history of life , but for a long time there was no proof that they actually did so .
26 In the modern Hebrew Bible all numbers are written out in full , but for a long time the text was written without vowels .
27 Turner is one of my favourite painters , but for a long time I have had a theory that he had " wide-angle eyes " that filled the camera with distorted shapes .
28 But for a long time all the local shop-boys had insulted him because he wore the uniform of a charity-boy .
29 She took it through to the lounge and laid it on the rug and at first I was amused But I could see all was not well because she sat as she usually does , but for a long time — over half an hour — then she lay down like this and she has n't moved . "
30 I accept that the number of immigration officers at Heathrow has increased , but for a long time the numbers employed were well below what was required .
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