Example sentences of "for his [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Feted as a genius at twenty-one , wined and dined for his striking originality , the world his oyster and a nice vivacious wife to boot …
2 ‘ John spoke to him about the inadvisability of running errands on racecourses for his warned-off father , and said that if Jason had any information , he should pass it on to him , John Millington .
3 From prison Cranmer wrote to the Queen asking for her mercy and pardon for his heinous folly in following the Will of Edward VI .
4 I am grateful for the hon. Gentleman 's opening comments , but not very grateful for his latter comments .
5 Wilko ( ex teacher ) is known for his deep thought and intellectual ways … and so is cuntona ( amonsgt other things ) .
6 If you can , you should try to work out in advance what the patient needs for his practical comfort ; how you are going to arrange his living quarters and his access to the bathroom and toilet ; and how he is going to occupy his time .
7 I remember Quintin Hogg , now Lord Hailsham , filling the Market Hall with almost a thousand people , for his key speech .
8 When Watt 's master patent for his separate condenser expired in 1800 , he retired from active work .
9 In 1807 he received the gold medal of the Society of Arts , Commerce , and Manufactures , for his agricultural innovations .
10 When the delegates from Western literature meet on the first day to pray for their existence , there is an attempted disruption of the ceremony by Muslim fundamentalists who claim to object to the Christian format of the proceedings , but , as we later discover , their real target is the elusive Gibreel Farishta whom they are trying to punish for his heretical views .
11 George who did n't need glasses ( as he kept telling people ) reached for his magnifying glass .
12 Much as he mistrusted almost every Irishman with whom he came in contact on the Continent ( Bishop Clement for his disrespect of patristic authority , the priest Sampson for his cavalier attitude to the baptismal rite , Virgil of Salzburg for sowing dissension between himself and the duke of Bavaria as well as for believing that the world was round ) , Boniface 's establishing of monasteries as the learned back-up to missionary work and his devotion to the papacy and to Rome both owed something to the Irish background in England .
13 I certainly shall , and I pay tribute to my hon. Friend for his assiduous representations on behalf of his constituents .
14 The laurels for criticism went to Thomas McEvilley ‘ for his reasoned way of dealing with such issues as quality , multiculturalism , and modernism/postmodernism ’ .
15 Pieda , a powerful economic group , has attacked him for his crippling levy on whisky and says the excise tax policy on the famous tipple is ‘ against the national interest and discriminates against one of the UK 's top five exporters ’ .
16 Eddie George , soon to be the governor of the Bank of England , has asked to have his salary frozen for his five-year term to demonstrate his determination to fight inflation .
17 Now living in Wimbledon , in a spacious house complete with swimming pool , Crawford went into four months ' training for his gruelling role , starting each day at 6.30am with a four-mile run across the common , which he built up to twelve miles .
18 Adonis , cold and puritanical , rejects the lustful invitations of Venus , the supreme goddess , He goes off hunting , and as a punishment for his presumptuous chastity , is killed by a boar .
19 Deric , whose back problems prevent his pivoting , prods to some purpose for his 79 years and is mustard round the greens .
20 Widely known for his anti-Maastricht politics , Fillon says that he wants to avoid ‘ getting bogged down at the EC level … whose cumbersome procedures put a damper on the research community ’ .
21 LEE KONITZ Over the years , Konitz has developed into one of the most fluent and intelligent of contemporary improvisers , his light yet husky alto sound the perfect vehicle for his incisive lines .
22 Phil Edmonds encounters some resistance as he prepares for his first-class comeback
23 And he 's won a legion of fans for his anti-establishment views and work with campaigning groups like Amnesty International .
24 The primitive ceremony which came soonest to Eliot 's mind , whether in his ‘ Beating of a Drum ’ or in 1926 when he spoke of savages who ‘ believe that the ritual is performed in order to induce a fall of rain' , was rain-making , probably because he had read about it for his 1913 seminar paper .
25 Is it music for his imagined funeral , or does it remind the singer that although unhappy , he is in love ?
26 His wanderings in the nearby Derbyshire dales laid the foundations for his lifelong love of landscape .
27 The Association honoured him on his retirement with the award of a medal of honour and elected him as a Vice-President The following year he was made an OBE for his lifelong work for the deaf .
28 His house , into which he welcomes his visitors with open hospitality , is a charming , three-storeyed Victorian building attached to a smaller unit which acts as the atelier for his lifelong friend , the sculptor Morton Rosengarten , and his charming painter-wife , Violet .
29 London died 12 January 1714 , leaving estates in Thames Ditton , purchased from Talman , who built there a small house for his lifelong friend .
30 Laszlo Polgar … he has constructed a shrine to chess and a laboratory for his obsessive theories of genius rearing PHOTOGRAPHS : TAMAS REVESZ Judit … inspirational Zsofia … experimenting Zsuzsa … watchful
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