Example sentences of "for [art] [adj] [n mass] in " in BNC.

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1 The catalogues which accompany these events have rather different characters , for although there are entries for the exhibited works in each sort of catalogue , and usually an introduction , historical catalogues often have additional essays .
2 In Cardiff , which is the focus for the empirical data in this paper , the public statements followed a similar pattern of support .
3 Donald Davie has suggested that one reason for the explosion of theory is that it provides ‘ a stamping ground for the innumerable people in departments of English ( also of French , of German , of Classics ) who have energy and intelligence but no literary sensibility . ’
4 He needed to let off steam , and it was impossible for the other people in the bar not to overhear .
5 What are the implications of these rather abstract remarks for the key people in higher education ?
6 Again he said , in an argument strangely reminiscent of Erastus , Richard Hooker and Matthew Arnold , that ‘ the State is more sacred than any Church … for the State stands for the whole people in their manifold collective life ; and any Church is but a fragment of that life , though one of the most important fragments ’ .
7 The period between the wars was an unhappy one for the British people in general , and particularly for the majority who belonged to the industrial working class .
8 Mr Milburn has contacted Durham County Council to explain the situation and push the case for the local people in the hope the council may subsidise the route .
9 Versatile midfielder ‘ super Alan Pardew ’ joined The Eagles from Yeovil Town for a mere £7,500 in 1987 and made tremendous progress with the Palace , so that he missed only one match during our 1988–89 promotion season , for which his drive , energy and cultured right foot provided an invaluable component , and just two games upon our return to the 1st Division in 1989–90 .
10 Was it recording the legendary and seemingly endless ‘ A Huge Ever Growing Pulsating Brain That Rules From The Centre Of The Underworld ’ for a paltry £20 in 1989 ?
11 APV , the engineer and food processor , has sold off its ventilation and warm air hand dryer business , Vent-Axia , to Smiths Industries for a cool £56m in cash .
12 It is centenary year for the New Zealand Rugby Football Union , good enough cause for a three-match series in a week against the Rest of the World .
13 There was barely room for a primitive headquarters in the tiny Mairie at Souilly , let alone anywhere to sleep .
14 The yard was bought by Kvaerner , one of Norway 's largest shipbuilding and engineering conglomerates , for a token £7m in 1988 , by a government anxious to end the state links with shipbuilding .
15 The ‘ conversion ’ of the UK government has been briefly described earlier ; it is manifested in their July 1989 commitment to spend £10m. on climate change research in 1989/90 and the confident request to them from the Advisory Board for the Research Councils ( ABRC ) for an extra £11m. in 1990 and £13m. in the two succeeding years for additional environmental research .
16 The UN High Commissioner for Refugees , Sadako Ogata , presenting a UN appeal launched on Sept. 4 for an additional $434,000,000 in aid , warned of potential large-scale starvation in the approaching winter .
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