Example sentences of "he [verb] it for [art] " in BNC.

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1 He fought it for a second , then gave in .
2 He tried it for a day , but grew bored with museums and heavy concentration , and their clumsy attempts to pick up girls ; he returned to the room during the day when they were out .
3 He built it for a very simple reason .
4 He played a diabolical second shot and he must have finished all of 20 yards from the hole , but he sank it for a 3 .
5 This back parlour , Hope thought , as he entered it for the third time that day , is like a little theatre : Act I , Colonel Moore ; Act II , Amaryllis ; Act III
6 He studied it for a while , whistled and rang Fulham .
7 Instead , he renewed it for a year ; by June 3rd he has to decide whether to do so again .
8 ‘ Johnny rang me and he said my photograph was awfully good and could he use it for the front cover of Backward Glances , ’ Mr Winner tells me .
9 He shook it for a while until it gurgled and moved its head weakly .
10 The co-existence of opposite feelings experienced by a spectator during a performance of tragedy is shared by the tragic artist himself Despite the pleasure he finds in appearances , he negates it for the higher satisfaction of their destruction .
11 He takes it for a walk — such walks have long been a ritual activity of the country 's more optimistic male poor , the dog more expensively jacketed than the chap .
12 He examined it for a few moments , then realised Tock was standing beside him with a can of oil .
13 He watched it for a moment , but it stayed off .
14 He watched it for an hour , and it flickered once
15 There is erm a chap down our road had a had a huge dog and when he when he took it for a walk , you know he used to he used to stagger along with him and my wife used to say there he goes again , the do what was it she used to say , the dog 's taking the man for a walk again and it i do you think it 's that sort of idea you know that in some households th the dog takes over from the er sort of central figure , even the dominant figure , things hinge round the dog , you know the holiday what shall we do with the dog , pouring down with rain but the dog has to go out for its walk and somebody has to take it .
16 She said well he took it for the glass .
17 Davide had turned up a coin , one afternoon , when he was mooning around ; it was a common enough type , the professor told him in the museum at Riba , where he took it for an opinion .
18 He knew it for a certainty .
19 The cold was within his heart now , and he knew it for the heartcold of the truly bereft .
20 It poured out into the still night and Nuadu shivered , because he knew it for the evil magic of the Dark Ireland ; the ancient , malevolent enchantment of the necromancers .
21 Small things delighted him ; when Bowler 's mother knitted him a sweater he wore it for a period continuously .
22 When the Lord made Sunday he meant it for a day of rest , a day of peace and quiet after the turmoil of the working week .
23 I 'm sure he meant it for the best — I always told you , he means well — but I have to admit , he 's not an easy man to talk to .
24 He kept it for a talisman , taking it with him in his pocket when he married Maria Filippa , and on the boat when they crossed the ocean to New York .
25 He bought it for the Astra .
26 But in the very next poem he says that he did it for a change of diet , a bout of ‘ physic ’ as it were , needed after over-indulgence : ‘ being full of your ne'er cloying sweetness , /To bitter sauces did I frame my feeding ’ ( 118 ) .
27 He did it for a laugh . ’
28 ‘ I expect he did it for the insurance , ’ Dangerfield said .
29 And sis he do it for the whole of the island or just the was did the sort of parish have their own chap ?
30 Today , in Court 13 , he saves it for the end of his opening .
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