Example sentences of "who [vb -s] for [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 They were two of five Winchester Club players in the nine-member Alton College squad , which also included five county players , and Cathy MacCormack who plays for the South of England under-18 team .
2 Former world snooker champion Terry Griffiths , who plays for the South Wales CA Division Five side Burry Port , is spearheading a campaign for a new sports stadium in the town .
3 Who plays for the football team you support ?
4 But the talented Keane , who plays for the Republic of Ireland against Spain in Seville tomorrow , will put the negotiations on ice while he weighs up his options .
5 No one who thinks for a moment will suppose that that is a path in which there are no hills to climb .
6 By a painter who befriends him , and who sleeps for a while with his mother , Jaromil , already self-perceived as exceptional , original , is introduced to modern art , which ‘ had not yet become the shopworn property of the bourgeois masses and retained the fascinating aura of a sect , a magical exclusivity fascinating to childhood — an age always daydreaming about the romanticism of secret societies , fraternities and tribes ’ .
7 I mean who who cares for the electricity ?
8 So what you say about the rights of fathers is also about who is the ‘ real ’ father — the biological father or the man who cares for the child ?
9 It is an issue for anyone who cares for the sanctity of human life .
10 The supreme dread of everyone who cares for the good of the nation or race is that men should be adrift for want of anchorage for their convictions …
11 The architect who advertises for a pupil ( 'talent no consideration' but a premium of £100 required ) might be Dickens 's fictitious Mr Pecksniff , who has never himself designed or built anything real , and trains his pupils on similar lines , ‘ constructing in the air a vast quantity of Castles , Houses of Parliament , and other Public Buildings ’ , a divorce between the idea and the actuality noted by Joe Gargery in the expressive phrase , ‘ drawd too architectooralooral ’ .
12 If each member of the legislature who votes for a checkerboard compromise does so not because he himself has no principles but because he wants to give the maximum possible effect to the principles he thinks right , then how has anyone behaved irresponsibly ?
13 Under New York law , anyone who contracts for the story of a person accused or convicted of a crime must deposit the proceeds of the contract with a Crime Victims Compensation Board .
14 This uncertainty about the proper role of litigation by private citizens is also reflected in the requirement that a litigant who applies for a prerogative order must first seek the leave of the court to do so .
15 The person who applies for the grant must be receiving income support , housing benefit or community charge benefit or be the partner of someone receiving those benefits .
16 an afternoon caller who leaves the garden gate open or a tramp who asks for a can of water and leaves the tap on .
17 Hello-Goodbye featured Crawford as a playboy adventurer , with a penchant for vintage cars , who falls for a baron 's nymphomaniac wife , played by Gilles .
18 HUSBANDS AND WIVES : Woody Allen 's vivid tale about a middle-aged lecturer who falls for a student .
19 HUSBANDS AND WIVES : Woody Allen 's vivid tale about a lecturer who falls for a student .
20 The module owner is generally the person or organisation who pays for the module ( or modules ) to be developed , although this user has no specific LIFESPAN privileges .
21 The module owner is generally the person or organisation who pays for the module ( or modules ) to be developed , although this user has no specific LIFESPAN privileges .
22 Similarly the question of the need to store the goods in third party premises , if the buyer can not accept delivery when they are ready for delivery , really comes down to who pays for the storage charges .
23 Popular elections for the executive President , who serves for a maximum of two consecutive five-year terms , were held for the first time in December 1990 .
24 Nothing gives so bad an impression to the other members of the committee and to the officers present than a member who talks without having read his agenda papers , or who has missed an earlier meeting where the matter was fully discussed or who talks for the sake of talking on every subject .
25 Bob Roberts ( played by Robbins himself ) is a charming , clean-cut , All-American who runs for the Senate in Pennsylvania .
26 Mary , who works for a publishing firm , said last night : ‘ People are speechless when I tell them where they 're calling .
27 It 's fine if all year round you carry the bag of a genuine superstar , who might win £500,000 ; but a caddie who works for a golfer who is outside the top twenty in the Order of Merit will not exactly be reaching for the champagne every night .
28 ‘ I have an old friend who works for a publisher in New York and I stayed with her for a couple of weeks while I found a job .
29 We eventually learn that Someone is a psychiatrist called Larry who works for a group of astrophysicists at a scientific research laboratory .
30 The woman 's hands , he says , are those of someone who works for a living — not those of a lady like Kee .
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