Example sentences of "could [verb] [adv] for a " in BNC.
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1 | In the gravityless environment of the hulk any unexploded bolts or similar projectiles could ricochet unpredictably for a long time within a confined space . |
2 | ‘ Perhaps I could stay here for a day or two , ’ she said . |
3 | Afraid that she might have hurt Nora , who was sitting very quietly , Louise added , ‘ Of course , she 'll miss you but I do think she could stay on for a little longer , to see what might happen . ’ |
4 | Michael Howard , the employment secretary , was left to make the best of this glum news by telling the TECs ' directors — 1,200 of them , by December 1990 — that they could make up for a shortfall in cash from the Treasury by raising money from the private sector . |
5 | If you could qualify either for a reduced pension of your own or a dependant 's addition , the higher of the two would be paid . |
6 | As she worked the crochet table-mats her mother had ordered , the intricate sequence of stitches could blot out for a moment or two the scenes that daily since that Easter feast she had staged between herself and Tommaso Talvi . |
7 | Previously , he says , the intended individual could claim neither for a legacy nor a trust . |
8 | After four years of service they could return home for a holiday with the family or bring out their wives and children , providing they had found accommodation for them . |
9 | You could sign up for a series of courses , which you could take at your own pace . |
10 | Often the Phantasms — daemon-masked , each dabbed with different costly scents , and gowned in luminous silk appliquéd with lascivious emblems — would bomb around the broad upper avenues on their jet-trikes , and through almost deserted midnight malls , seeking stylised mayhem with another brat gang or hunting for an odour bar or an elegant brothel which they could take over for a few hours before fleeing just ahead of a Judge patrol . |
11 | We could also decide on points where the accompaniment could take over for a brief period , or perhaps form a dialogue with the melody . |
12 | She told me she did n't eat lunch any more as it had become a bourgeois meal , but I could call in for a cup of de-caff and con her into whatever it was I wanted . |
13 | We could go away for a weekend together , we could ; we could wake up next morning and eat croissants and drink coffee from blue china bowls . |
14 | However , he left the next day , calling later to ask Lorna to meet him nearby with £500 cash so he could go away for a few days . |
15 | ‘ We could go away for a bit — a break ; a couple of weeks perhaps . |
16 | It could go on for a long time in this condition , like the Spanish Empire in its centuries of decline . |
17 | The list could go on for a long time . |
18 | This is another list that could go on for a long time . |
19 | I could go on for a long time in praise of Maxwell . |
20 | But er I could er I I could go on for a long time on that subject but time 's short dear , |
21 | Perhaps we could go there for a drink later ? |
22 | ‘ Well , I suppose you could go there for a new typewriter , though as I say , they 're mainly interested in bulk orders . |
23 | ‘ I thought we could go out for a meal , ’ he said folding the paper and slipping it into his jacket pocket . |
24 | By evening , he would be recovered , and they could go out for a jar , maybe . |
25 | Maybe we could go out for a drink afterwards ? |
26 | You know , you could pay more for a flashy car . ’ |
27 | His meeting was not until the next morning , so he could switch off for a few hours . |
28 | I said they did and offered to leave the door on the latch so he could sneak in for a bit of a warm . |
29 | He was a very nice man and said we could come in for a chat . |
30 | Well , she 's still not really conscious , but he could come in for a minute , could n't he ? ’ |