Example sentences of "for the [noun sg] [art] " in BNC.

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1 A short while after his flight , Dr Kalley put in a claim for compensation for £1,574 , through the British Government , for the damage the crowd had caused to his house .
2 Chancellor Norman Lamont was also slammed by the Labour leader for the damage the Tories ' ‘ heartless and mindless ’ policies had done .
3 For the present the reader can take superscripts and subscripts to be equivalent .
4 For the present the chances of survival are good — BR have just spent a lot of money replacing the Glanrhyd bridge , the scene of a tragic accident two years ago , also on track and signalling improvements .
5 Although he anticipated a change in the relationship as Britain gradually concentrated on its roles in Europe , for the present the two countries continued to take " a broadly similar view of the world " .
6 Budgets will be devolved to team managers but for the present the department lacks the confidence .
7 If they are then housed for the winter the immunity acquired by the end of the grazing season has waned by the following spring and yearlings turned out at that time are partially susceptible to reinfection and so contaminate the pasture with small numbers of eggs .
8 The latter had been intended for the scrap-yard a short while earlier .
9 The purpose of doing so is to attempt to obtain for the landlord a higher rent than would be awarded by the court on an application for an interim rent under s24A of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 .
10 Not for the Logic a uxorious diminuendo , like the Zanussi ZFL 1023 ; rather , its gingered spin delivers brilliant cachinnations , racketing uproars rivalled only by the cacophonous Indesit Omega W1130 .
11 With the introduction of wagon building , and the acceptance of Wolverton Train Lighting System as the standard for the LMS the Works were reorganised .
12 The Justices had power to seize for the king the bailiwicks of Forest wardens and foresters of fee who were guilty of misconduct in office , and on occasion removed unpaid Forest officers such as the verderers .
13 In this respect it is worth asking whether it is a mere coincidence that neo-colonialism produces for the bureaucracy a reversion to pre-bureaucratic ( e.g. medieval ) forms of compensation for service to the state .
14 For the prizegiving a platform had been built at the back of the stands where the Princess Royal , assisted by Jackie Stewart , presented the prizes to the teams and individuals .
15 The spokeswoman for the diocese the Bishop of Durham 's first press officer is definitely not a distant relation .
16 This requirement has now been dispensed with and in order to qualify for the discount the alarm must be in accordance with the IS199 specification only .
17 For the parson the whole point of going to university was to become a minister of God .
18 Children can start to earn stickers for the chart every time they comply with the first request .
19 for the Innocent a rose is a rose trala
20 He had come before luncheon , eaten everything put before him with great dedication , looked about him hopefully for the cigar the household did not possess , and then explained abruptly without any preliminaries to Alexandra that she was her aunt 's sole heir .
21 For the State the system was unsatisfactory because so little revenue found its way to Moscow , yet fixed salaries were beyond the government 's means .
22 We we we 've still got the parts for the concerto the guitar concerto , yeah ?
23 Oh no no no , there was no such , there was there was distemper as it was called , er not like emulsion is today , there was this distemper that was called but er oh no that was that was for the pigsty the distemper was , whitewash .
24 Only a small staff of permanent employees lived in the cortijo ; for the harvest the bailiff hired day labourers from the emigrant provinces and the local towns .
25 For the press the facilities were as basic as they were at the hotel .
26 Unfortunately , as this chapter shows , for the majority the impact of ageism is all too clear .
27 For the majority the work experience includes alienation from the product of one 's own labour ; controls backed by ideology or coercion as management assert their ‘ right ’ to control ; market or contractual relations with the organization , rather than integration into it ; and occupational or professional solidarities and consciousness rather than working-class solidarity .
28 For the horologist the nominal essence of the clock is an idea of its real essence ; in this he differs from the gazing countryman , to whom the nominal essence is simply some combination of various observable features .
29 For the Profitboss a company 's marketing effort is a hundred times more than just what the marketing experts do .
30 For the Profitboss every decision , every action , every piece of behaviour he and his team make have a criterion of success .
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