Example sentences of "called for [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The summit called for rapid completion or progress as regards investment services and insurance , intellectual property , takeovers , the liberalization of road transport as called for in a Dutch memorandum , the harmonization of animal and plant health standards , and the adoption by the end of 1990 of new value added tax and excise duty arrangements and of guidelines on trans-European transport networks .
2 The Intor work could form the basis of the ‘ Next European Tokamak ’ called for in the 1982–1986 fusion research programme of the European Economic Community .
3 An increase of the Fixed Satellite Service band is proposed between 3.5GHz and 3.6GHz while flexibility is called for in the existing bands for Fixed Satellite Service and the Broadcasting Satellite Service , particularly between 11GHz and 12GHz .
4 Several items called for in the Digital Servo Interface are ‘ specials ’ and will not be available locally .
5 A considerable injection of resources will be required to provide the managerial and technological expertise called for in the White Paper .
6 This idea , called for in the 1978 Camp David accords , is anathema to the Jewish settlers there .
7 A second group of statements has the distinction that their truth-values do not depend on whether there does exist a thing called for by a contained referring expression .
8 It was the special contribution of the ILEA , and in particular of the advisory team headed by Mr Leslie Ryder , that it considered what types of ancillary personnel were called for by the new methods , and their training and enter.relationships .
9 Thus to is used with the infinitive both for the lexical and grammatical meaning it brings into the context : its lexical meaning of an approach to the infinitive event from a position before is called for by the relative position in time of the extra-infinitival spatial support with respect to the position occupied by non-ordinalized person at the beginning of the infinitive 's event ; its grammatical meaning as an establisher of a relation where the inherent mechanism of incidence is inoperative is called for by the fact that the event can not otherwise be represented as incident to the extra-infinitival support since the latter is not already situated at the beginning of the event , i.e. is not within the confines of event time .
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