Example sentences of "each [noun] for [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 But he warns that the ideas of civil association and enterprise association can not be understood as complementary characteristics ; they each stand for an independent , self-sustaining mode of association .
2 As was customary in North Korea the authorities reported that 99.73 per cent of the electorate had voted , in each instance for the sole candidate of the ruling KWP .
3 Executive power lies with the Federal Council ( Bundesrat ) of seven members elected by the Federal Assembly , which also elects , each December for the succeeding year , two Federal Council members to be President and Vice-President ( head and deputy head of state ) .
4 Remember that there is a £10 prize on offer each issue for the lucky article out of the hat — that 's not much I know , but we spent all the budget on meeting ‘ refreshments ’ ( hic ) .
5 Taking individual orders from his customers , the wheelwright built each cart for the particular conditions of a particular farm .
6 Each evening for the past couple of months Lurgan town centre — like many other towns — has been sealed by the RUC from early evening .
7 There 've been visitors each day for the past year and a half to this quiet corner of the Whitworth Road Cemetery in Swindon .
8 During the week you will stop at a different location each day for an organised excursion .
9 Jeremy Isaacs and I had know each other for a long time .
10 Indeed , she was sure he hardly reed she was alive , save that they had known each other for a long time .
11 The Regent and Lovat had known each other for a long time and shared affection and respect .
12 We stood looking at each other for a long moment ; then he walked slowly up to me .
13 Was it at this moment that some reciprocal need established an understanding that they two were friends , would know each other for a long part of a life-time ?
14 They had n't seen each other for a long time .
15 Dalziel and Pascoe looked at each other for a long moment after the door had slammed behind Evans .
16 We 've known each other for a long time . ’
17 When the music stopped they looked at each other for a long moment , then reluctantly drew apart .
18 They looked at each other for a long time .
19 The sisters stared at each other for a split second and then Jenny flung herself on Sara , crying incoherently .
20 Thus the Rescorla-Wagner ( 1972 ) model ( see Chapter 1 ) envisages conditioning as being a process in which stimuli present on a conditioning trial compete with each other for a limited amount of associative strength .
21 They looked squarely and intently at each other for a full minute , as blankly as strangers , trying each other for traces of concession or agreement or affection , even .
22 They stood almost touching each other for a full minute .
23 Researches under the auspices of Britain 's Rare Breeds Survival Trust suggest that the indigenous breeds have not yet diverged enough from each other for a high frequency of chromosomal polymorphism to be established and in most of them the similarities far outweigh the differences .
24 Clearly this model has considerable relevance in an NHS context , where in the majority of cases purchasers and providers are locked into each other for a large part of their business ; the information base on demand , cost and quality is poor and transaction costs are potentially high .
25 That 's why it 's important to have time off every so often so we can get away from each other for a short while . ’
26 Ellen caught my eye , and we stared at each other for a sympathetic fraction of a second , then I looked away to see that the sticky liquid had sprayed across the teak planks .
27 However , on our continent , on the doorstep of the most civilised part of the world , we are watching human beings killing each other for no other reason than the fact that they live next door to each other .
28 Various parties pursued conflicting objectives , often making tenuous alliances with each other for the sole purpose of expediency .
29 The family members may come to blame external factors or blame each other for the addictive disease of the primary sufferer .
30 They have not spoken to each other for the past 10 years .
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