Example sentences of "for [noun sg] [conj] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The tough world of motor racing finds Cagney competing against his brother for glory and the girl .
2 The use of a spectacle-case for protection and the habit of keeping the lenses clean helps to ensure that these aids to sight are kept in a usable , effective condition .
3 Ore was crushed and stamped on the spot , being sent as a concentrate to Cheadle in Staffordshire for reduction and the manufacture of wire , and Dickson says , sheets for coppering the bottoms of ships .
4 Bills for gambling debts are stuffed beneath an overflowing chamber-pot and the Prince is surrounded by medications for indigestion and the pox .
5 There is a wide consensus among medical educators and students about the need for change and the direction it should take , and there are plenty of examples from Britain and elsewhere that change is possible and can be effective .
6 It is important to emphasise that the impact of the Teacher Placement Service is far greater than the sum of teachers taking placement , as evaluative returns and case study evidence consistently point to the experience as a stimulus for change and the development of partnership activities .
7 There is the push for change and the pull of security , the longing for intimacy and the fear of being engulfed , the wish to be the same as others and the drive to be different .
8 FEB 1992 In the 36 hours following the TOP launch in February 1992 senior managers talked to all Station staff , including shift workers , to explain the need for change and the part everyone would play in the process .
9 Anthony Bradley , emeritus professor of constitutional law at Edinburgh University , said there was a case for a double-stage inquiry which first examined the principle or case for change and the second to study how changes could be made with the minimum dislocation or waste of expenditure .
10 It therefore approaches and studies the mass media from a number of perspectives , such as cultural premises , the potential for change and the evolution of normative values leading to a ‘ new order ’ .
11 They will not bring about change unless the rewards for change or the resolution of a crisis situation can be delivered .
12 I flailed for support as the camera flew up to the padded ceiling .
13 She 's trembling violently and she starts to retch , leaning against me for support as the heaving racks her .
14 Visitors will be charged £1.50 for admission and the Taste Sensation roadshow set off for its Blackpool location just days after being unveiled at Park Royal .
15 With costs unofficially estimated at up to £200,000 , the award seemed likely to force the closure of the magazine , which has built a reputation for trendiness and a circulation of 73,000 , selling mainly to people in their 20s .
16 For part if the time they had been in support of another Engineer regiment for joint river crossing operations , and on one occasion had carried infantrymen over a one-kilometre-wide stretch of the Weser , using their rigs as landing craft .
17 Most of them had pierced openings for part or the whole of the light , either left open or filled with glass ( 180 and 181 ) .
18 Test holes have been bored to see if the land is suitable for building but no reply has been received .
19 The refectory had been built when there was money around for building and the architect had let himself go with walls of glass and a high curving ceiling panelled in pastel colours .
20 For mentally impaired elderly people the relevant legislation for Guardianship and the Court of Protection occurs in the Mental Health ( Northern Ireland ) Order ( 1986 ) .
21 This nuclear binding energy is zero for hydrogen where the nucleus is a single proton and rises to 0.7 per cent of the mass x c 2 of the constituent nucleons in the case of iron .
22 Is he dramatising all this a bit , for sympathy and a bed for the night , or is this the normal way of the Gael ?
23 And make no mistake , the rum ration is very important to a matelot ; not only to be sipped or gulped , but something to be used for bargaining or the repayment of a favour , or even bottled and taken home on leave .
24 The need for patience and the ability to stand back and let the groups reach their own decisions became new management skills .
25 He has held many distinguished posts since then , including Chief Scientific Adviser to the Secretary for Defence and the Government .
26 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence when the Army Sports Control Board will next meet to discuss funding .
27 It means most of all for Bourdieu that the value of political products is largely determined outside of the political field .
28 We have watched Eastern Europe grapple for freedom and the liberty that we enjoy , yet I have watched the House of Commons talk solemnly as if this were merely a question of a pile of money at one end of a table or the issuing of financial instruments .
29 We have watched eastern Europe grapple for freedom and the liberty that we enjoy , yet I have heard the House of Commons talk solemnly as if this were merely a question of a pile of money at one end of a table or the issuing of financial intruments .
30 The three year contracts that Lyall and McGiven signed in the summer of 1990 were coming up for expiry so the Town board have been working to keep their highly successful pair with the club to put a stop to speculation and rumours that were beginning to start .
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