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

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1 They represent a potentially very important method of providing good rented or cheap owner-occupier housing in rural areas since they are an established medium for obtaining finance and for managing schemes .
2 Stuff toy mice made out of rabbit fur , for kittens and for elderly cats in need of exercise .
3 There is no independently characterisable subclass of dogs for which being a pet is a necessary or canonical trait ( lap-dogs do not count , because they can not be distinguished without invoking the characteristic of pet-hood ) ; nor are there distinguishable sub-types of pet which are canonically or necessarily dogs ( except , of course , lap-dogs , which do not count here , either , and for parallel reasons ) .
4 The four-part oboe band played both for outdoor ceremonies and for indoor entertainments .
5 Both the Britons ' and the IFL literature contained lurid tales of alleged Jewish responsibility for crime , the white slave traffic , for casualties in the First World War , for corrupting public life and for financial malpractices and banking irregularity .
6 They did this by ‘ producing a set of mathematical models which linked variables ( demand , service levels , unit costs and infrastructure ) in such a way that , as changes were made in one or more of these variables , the estimated consequences for the others , and for financial results could be evaluated ’ ( Department of Transport , 1983 , p.63 ) .
7 The trips , made at public expense , included those made for political — Republican party — purposes and for personal reasons including dental appointments and skiing trips .
8 Conscientious but ‘ experimental ’ introduction of Hungarian-style measures , with isolated centres of the economy turned into laboratories of reform ; a limited legalisation of the ‘ second economy ’ on the East European pattern , and greater support for the consumer and for private farmers .
9 There would still be a place for amateurs , for salaried professionals and for private professionals , all of them supported in varying degrees by government funds .
10 A major cause of such segregation is competition for land and for preferred forms of housing .
11 He also left money for prisoners in the city 's prisons and the Gate House at Westminster and for poor householders in his ward and in two London parishes — St Magnus and St Christopher le Stocks , where he was then living — and in the parishes of Dorney and Burnham in Buckinghamshire and Sittingbourne in Kent , where he owned property .
12 ( However , this does happen occasionally and the relocation companies report that their services have been used for senior new appointments and for technical specialists . )
13 For these acts and for occasional bouts of stone-throwing , the UMWA has been fined more than $30 million by the courts .
14 Many lower-level headmen received a legitimate income by retaining a proportion of the fees paid to them for issuing various licences and for other duties .
15 And for other girls in Carlen 's study , the scars of having been in care are more vivid .
16 Thus , the average amount indicated as spent by the authorities with an above average number of programmes was approximately £5,000 , for authorities with a medium number of programmes it was approximately £2,000 , and for other authorities , £600 .
17 Erm , we would n't want the policy to progress so far erm as to get to the stage of looking for a specific site and for us to pull the rug underneath the County , and for other authorities to pull the rug from underneath the County at that stage , erm to answer to Mr Heselton 's specific question , of course we would n't object to a new settlement er in Selby , but erm it does n't erm it does n't detract from our objection to erm the principle of the policy , the way the policy 's expressed .
18 There were fewer ships to be built , less engineering , less steel , less coal , and so less money for shopkeepers and for other goods .
19 It was developed and used primarily during the First World War as a means of preventing dogs , used in the trenches as messengers and for other activities , from betraying their positions by a casual bark .
20 I agree that this scheme is significant not only because of what may be achieved for good in the north-west , but because it can act as a model for planning for other areas and for other denominations .
21 Instead , the work should consider what has culturally negotiated this experience for the artist and for other women whose personal experiences so closely echo her own .
22 Not to have a vote , because of the guillotine and for other reasons , is to fail the very people for whom we should be speaking .
23 My Lords , I think I made it perfectly clear what I did mean er I did qualify it by saying that of course there are times when patients do have to wait on trolleys for diagnostic purposes , for observation and for other reasons er but once an admission has been agreed , then that patient should be admitted , that is our policy and that is what we 're working towards .
24 The carriage of goods for a subsidiary or for a holding company and for other companies which are subsidiaries of the same holding company is generally regarded as own account for these purposes .
25 Anxiety for the primary sufferer and for other members of the family .
26 Love and concern for the primary sufferer and for other members of the family .
27 Hundreds passed through Teheran for the Shah and for other members of the court .
28 Further , if a shopper with some perverted sense of humour , intending only to create confusion and nothing more both for the supermarket and for other shoppers , switches labels , I do not think that that act of label switching alone is without more an appropriation , though it is not difficult to envisage some cases of dishonest label switching which could be .
29 The point is to facilitate discussion of how to change things — how in terms of the title of this book to get Beyond the Inner City , both for Tyneside and for other places like it .
30 The Act provides for the local education authority to ensure that a child identified as having special educational needs is given education within an ordinary school as long as that is compatible with efficient use of resources and efficient education , both for the child concerned and for other children at the school .
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