Example sentences of "to pay for [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Removal of the need to pay for a junior barrister as well as a QC in a substantial number of legal aid cases .
2 The original grant of £500 p.a. ( then enough to pay for a part-time secretary ) has been steadily increased to a sum of £20,140 p.a. in 1988 .
3 This will tend to reduce the price that a trader is prepared to pay for a long position , and increase the price required for a short position .
4 After first of all declining to write for the series , Nation eventually agreed after a row with his former employer , comedian Tony Hancock , left him with no income to pay for a central heating system he was having installed at home .
5 Elaborate pricing mechanisms — the K-factors and all the rest — were set up by the government before the sell-off ; they were aimed at helping the industry , which had long been a victim of under-investment , to pay for a capital-spending programme of at least £18 billion over the next decade .
6 DERBY were made to pay for a sloppy display of defending as Guy Whittingham scored after seven and 50 minutes to take his season 's tally to 29 .
7 Sophia 's decision to pay for a private nurse was a super gesture .
8 Forty thousand pounds he had paid for it , a sum which now seemed laughably small , but which in those days had been a vast amount to pay for a private house , even in such a prime position .
9 Now in fairness it would n't be our responsibility to pay for a new engine if the vehicle had been drive on .
10 You will have to pay for a new survey , solicitor 's fees , lender 's solicitor 's fees , arrangement fees , and sometimes your existing lender 's redemption penalty .
11 She finally settled the row by offering to pay for a new bottle , but then the police turned up and a scuffle ensued .
12 Your parents ca n't afford to pay for a new bed .
13 Now some of the money raised from its sale has been used to pay for a new art Gallery .
14 And will the sartorially-conscious supporter have to pay for a new wardrobe in which to battle the carabinieri ?
15 We often reached our overdraft limit because of a sticky cashflow — and after taking on a large mortgage to pay for a new factory we could n't raise any further borrowing for the second production line we needed much sooner than expected .
16 ‘ I do n't think it is fair to expect this lady to pay for a new lock .
17 In the final analysis all power relationships depend on resources , be it those obtained from the state , the respective local authority or the private individual who is to be willing to pay for a specific service .
18 On mentioning that I was not happy to pay for a second hour of parking , for the privilege of waiting for their delayed train , I was told ‘ That 's no problem .
19 The Roald Dahl Foundation has provided funds to pay for a paediatric epilepsy nurse at the unit .
20 Top-up orders indicate the restaurant is going to have to make do with existing equipment until trade picks up enough to pay for a complete replacement .
21 Local authorities in Scotland are being asked to pay for a Soviet ship to measure radioactive and chemical pollution in Scottish coastal waters .
22 The advantage to the bank is that it has the use of a deposit for a fixed period , but , because of the flexibility given to the lender , at a slightly lower price than it would have had to pay for a normal time deposit .
23 In 1982 , Kelly and Robert Rigney , chief administrative officer of San Bernardino county , persuaded the state to pay for a real building with isolators .
24 And your can use any number of eurocheques to pay for a particular item or service .
25 There is no golden rule as to what is the appropriate price to pay for a particular business .
26 However , by July there were signs of more serious trouble and City analysts believed that Eurotunnel might need a further £1bn to pay for a near tripling in the cost of the shuttle fleet and meet the rapidly increasing costs of labour and materials in South East England .
27 A levy on each package in German shops helps to pay for a waste-collection system , which picks up potentially recyclable household rubbish and hands it back to producer organisations .
28 To pace yourself , doing enough to pay for a comfortable life and little enough to stay invisible .
29 It has also underlined the urgent need for sufficient Government funds to pay for a massive recovery programme .
30 ‘ A small price to pay for a 600 Wurlitzer . ’
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