Example sentences of "for [pron] as [art] " in BNC.

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1 So while interpreters working from spoken English to sign language are called upon to work for nothing as a service to these normal , intelligent ‘ disabled ’ people , those in the foreign spoken language interpretive role , where language users are equal , may rise to occupy one of the highest status roles in diplomacy , and correspondingly command high financial rewards .
2 Every man jack has to work ten days each year for nothing as a kind of tax .
3 In the highly oxygenated water below a weir swim the little fish not known for nothing as the ‘ miller 's thumb ’ : the flattened head of the fish was often compared with the thumb of the miller , worn it was said from testing the flour .
4 Clive works for them as a delivery skipper .
5 She imagined the young doctor coming to this simple village , the home of his grandmother , to build his business empire , getting to know and love the villagers as he did so , and deciding to live with them and spend his spare time caring for them as a doctor .
6 Andrew Tombs , 27 , of Stokesley , North Yorkshire , agreed to carry out 150 hours community service after pleading guilty at Teesside Crown Court to stealing equipment valued at £7,400 from Tarmac Construction , while working for them as a drainer on a building site in the town .
7 Andrew Tombs , 27 , of Stokesley , North Yorkshire , agreed to carry out 150 hours community service after admitting at Teesside Crown Court stealing equipment worth £7,400 from Tarmac Construction , while working for them as a drainer on a building site in the town .
8 Born on 12 April , 1941 , the only son of an electricity board worker , he was snapped up by his local club West Ham , and made his debut for them as a 17-year-old against Manchester United in 1958 .
9 Yurchenko contacted the American Embassy in Rome in August 1985 , having already worked for them as an agent in place .
10 Do you take responsibility for them as an active dad ?
11 Your worships , Mr works for Wallbank aerials in Worley and he works for them as an engineer his vehicle was erm something that he did use for work , but unfortunately as a result of the accident his has been written off and he has n't yet been able to er , replace it and so he 's having to be erm er , chauffeured by the company to do his er his work .
12 Your Worships Mr works for in Worley and he works for them as an engineer .
13 That was the attraction for me as a director . ’
14 But my education made things harder for me as a soldier , paradoxically , for I thought too much and questioned the wisdom of those in command .
15 For me as a child , Glasgow was its buildings ; the city was physically oppressive in a way that is painfully memorable .
16 But in fact there was very little apart from discussion at the end , that was actually relevant to voluntary services , it was about local government reorganization which was very interesting , for me as a parish councillor .
17 ‘ When I bought this house and insisted she move in with me she took the path of least resistance and agreed , although even then if I 'd had the wits to see them all the signs were there that although she relished my role as provider she cared very little for me as a person . ’
18 So therefore was there anything for me as a consumer go along to the theatre , have a back programme that has been sponsored by Hydro Electric to use the bad example .
19 WHAT began for me as a culture shock 25 years ago , has now transmuted into an enduring sense of sorrow and frustration .
20 ‘ Obviously , this is a new experience for me as a manager . ’
21 The only things the Tories did for me as a businessman was to empty a lot of factory space which made it easy to buy up .
22 For me as a designer , the feel is similar to rayon , with lustre and drapeability .
23 ‘ That is a great honour for me as an Irishman , ’ he said .
24 And if you go down that road in every area of life , I think we 're storing tremendous trouble for ourselves as a society !
25 Making a name for himself as a boxer in the army had come easy to him , and had it been peace time he could probably have gone a long way in the sport .
26 One day he would like to make a name for himself as a public trainer — but that is some way in the future .
27 He ran away to sea at fifteen and made a name for himself as a good , but sadistic , fist fighter .
28 Samuel Beeton had already begun to make a name for himself as a publisher and editor .
29 He scraped through the Eton of Dr Edmond Warre [ q.v. ] , under the particular care of Arthur Benson [ q.v. ] , his housemaster , without distinction , but in 1902 gained a first class in modern history at Balliol College , Oxford , where he also made a reputation for himself as a roof-climber , despite his blindness .
30 Taken along with his restrained reaction to the repression of the pro-democracy movement in China itself [ see pp. 36720-22 ] , his attitude gave rise to some suggestions that he saw a role for himself as a potential mediator in the Hong Kong issue .
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