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5 Sentences With "beholden for"

How to use beholden for in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "beholden for" and check conjugation/comparative form for "beholden for". Mastering all the usages of "beholden for" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"In some ways this outside firm has more independence because they're not directly beholden for example to the campaign manager or the candidate for their sole source of income," he said.
From 21958, when the first American military occupation ended, and 21959, Cubans launched no less than five armed revolutionary movements against a corrupt state more beholden for its existence to American businesses than to the people.
128 As Philip S. Deloria explains, the OEO helped the Indian people become more independent and powerful: for the first time ". . . Indian tribal governments had money and were not beholden for it to the Bureau of Indian Affairs . . . Tribes could, to some degree, set their own priorities." Renewed self-determination by tribes "altered the nature of the [BIA] and the relationship between tribes and the federal government".
Coat of Arms of Auguste. On 26 May 1834, young Queen Maria II of Portugal was restored to the throne of Portugal, gifted to her by the abdication – and subsequent conquest in war – of her father, Emperor Pedro I of Brazil, who had to do battle against the usurpation of his rebellious younger brother, Dom Miguel. Maria's childhood betrothal to Dom Miguel was broken so that a more pliant husband could be found to beget a new Portuguese dynasty, one whose loyalty might prove more trustworthy if he had no other prospects, such that he would be entirely beholden for his dynastic fortune to Portugal's constitutional regime. The Queen obligingly settled on Auguste de Beauharnais who, once again, proved unthreatening to the Great Powers because of his lack of membership in an already reigning dynasty and lack of conflicting foreign obligations or ambitions.
Cotgrave states that he has sent his correspondent two copies of his book, and requests payment of twenty-two shillings, "which they cost me, who have not been provident enough to reserve any of them, and therefore am forced to be beholden for them to a base and mechanicall generation, that suffers no respect to weigh down a private gain." It appears from this letter that Cotgrave was still in Lord Burghley's service. If he is the same person as the "Randal Cotgreve" of the Harleian MS, he later became registrar to the bishop of Chester and married Ellinor Taylor of that city, by whom he had four sons, William, Randolf, Robert and Alexander, and a daughter Mary. The 1632 edition of the dictionary was evidently carried through the press by the author himself, the year of whose death is given in Cooper's "Memorials of Cambridge" as 1634.

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