Example sentences of "for the [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ No , not a bit , thanks , ’ she answered truthfully , for the chill she felt had come from within .
2 These would have to be raised to pay for the damage they caused in acid rain and global warming .
3 In every case the farmer reporting evidence said he was not against badgers in principle , but wanted either adequate compensation for the damage they did or someone to control them , because they had no natural predators .
4 They did so without any regard for the serious injury they could cause or for the damage they could inflict .
5 And I felt absolutely horrified , devastated to think that he could have done that sort of damage and just walked away he did n't even have to pay for the damage he 'd done .
6 That it is now compulsory to do so does not seem to increase that duty and , correspondingly , the plaintiff 's share in the responsibility for the damage he suffers .
7 The plaintiff 's share of the responsibility for the damage he had suffered in the accident arose out of the finding that either he ought to have known that the defendant 's ability to drive was impaired or , more likely , that he had drunk so much himself that he was unable to tell that the defendant 's ability was in fact impaired .
8 Simply turn the page for the exercises we 've chosen specially for you from Massage for Total Relaxation — and then face the world with a new sense of inner calm .
9 It was really too cold for the clothes I had brought , so I fell back on a recommended resource .
10 When the phone was in its cradle , Jessica reached for the clothes she had discarded .
11 For the present we may note that every person is considered to start life with a ‘ domicile or origin ’ , which will be , as a rule , the domicile of his father at the time of his birth ; and that this domicile of origin continues until it is shown that some other domicile has been acquired , and is restored whenever an acquired domicile is lost without the acquisition of another .
12 This distinction is linked to the different population size of the various units of local government and it will be discussed further in Chapter 4. for the present we may note the importance of the distinction for the status of local authorities .
13 Some of these questions will recur in the discussion section at the end of this chapter , and in later chapters on both intergovernmental relations and the services provided regionally , but for the present we will remain with those services provided by local government in the United Kingdom .
14 Of course it may , and indeed has , been argued-that the middle-class model is the model for the future [ = = ] but for the present we may simply note the variety of modes of family living that continue to exist and flourish .
15 Our reports provide many examples ; for the present we note three which were both prominent and recurrent In these cases the pressures and dilemmas could not only prove intractable but might also have adverse consequences for the children .
16 For the present we must return to the adjudicative context within which natural justice and fairness operate .
17 This relationship between torque and field strength receives more discussion in Chapter 3 so for the present we need only consider how the pole magnetic field can be maximised .
18 Such an historical perspective must be our long-term goal , even though for the present we can at best only hypothesize about the nature of the development processes at work .
19 For the present we shall derive the relation using an azimuthally symmetric two-dimensional surface .
20 For the present we need to proceed by inferences .
21 They would do his bidding , more or less , and for the present they would have to cope with Anne .
22 But for the present it will suffice to say that on this matter Lanfranc , no less than Anselm , would seem to have been content to rely on the tradition of the Canterbury monks , supported by documents which gave historical support to the testimony of the living word .
23 For the present it deals only with with the two expeditions that attract most excitement : Bosnia and Somalia .
24 More will be said below of their history in fiction ( chapter 4 ) ; for the present it is enough to notice that in this case , too , Sketches by Boz appears to mark a divide .
25 For the present it is sufficient to explain the term as the apparent increase in the size of a subject as the illumination intensity increases .
26 For the present it is assumed that the N ( No ) option is selected .
27 For the present it would be advisable not to report such allegations without giving the person defamed an opportunity to refute them in the same report .
28 But for the present she was lost in the wonder of her changed fortune .
29 But for the present she stayed where she was , collecting her thoughts , disciplining her emotions .
30 But for the present he had seen enough .
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