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14 Sentences With "putting up for sale"

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

The assets ConocoPhillips is putting up for sale are reported to be worth up to $3 billion.
But the process has not been helped by uncertainty surrounding the viability of the licences Lebanon is putting up for sale.
Lenders who are owed more than $21 billion by Kingfisher have started putting up for sale some of the carrier's assets.
A deal for the 37.17 percent stake that TFCC is putting up for sale on behalf of a major shareholder would have been Blackstone's first investment in Taiwan.
On Wednesday, the Hermann Historica auction house in Munich is putting up for sale a top hat worn by Hitler and a cocktail dress that belonged to Eva Braun, his longtime companion.
The company, Saudi Aramco, aims to strengthen its position on the Gulf of Mexico coast by buying a large oil refinery in the Houston Ship Channel that LyondellBasell is putting up for sale.
The company, which is in the midst of selling assets to lower debt, said it was putting up for sale assets in the Peroa and Cangoa areas, as well as in the BM-ES-21 concession.
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - The shopping center arm of furniture giant IKEA is putting up for sale 23 outdoor retail parks across Europe, timing the sale to coincide with a commercial property market boom driven by low interest rates.
BEIJING (Reuters) - A court in Southwest China is putting up for sale the entire inventory of the minor metal antimony that was held by the now-defunct Fanya Metal Exchange, as it tries to raise funds to pay back the bourse's creditors.
The park was one of a few spaces that Nashville's Metro Budget and Finance Committee considered putting up for sale in order to balance the city's budget for its upcoming fiscal year, which starts July 1, but it appears that the city will have to find the estimated $13 million that the land might have fetched elsewhere.
On December 28, 2006, Live Nation, the owner of the music center, confirmed they were putting up for sale the of land that constitutes the amphitheater complex, then known as the Verizon Wireless Music Center. In 2011, Klipsch Group, Inc., whose international headquarters are located nearby, acquired naming rights to the venue. The venue remained under the ownership of Live Nation and continued to draw major acts during the summer months.
After her husband's death in 1982, she donated $8 million to the Yale Medical School, then the largest gift in the school's history. The National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. acquired nine important American and French paintings, as well as $2 million for future acquisitions. She left $15 million to New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center in her own will. She also made art auction history in 1990 by putting up for sale, by Sotheby's, one of Renoir's most famous paintings, the sun-dappled cafe scene Bal au moulin de la Galette, Montmartre.
Later the palazzo was the residence of the "Leopard" himself, Alessandro III Filangeri, 8th Prince of Cutò (1802-1854), last minister of the last King of the Two Sicilies, on whom his great-grandson, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, patterned the protagonist of the famous novel. Alessandro III Filangeri had no sons. Eventually the palazzo passed on to his grandson (by his only daughter Giovanna Nicoletta, 9th Principessa di Cutò), Alessandro Mastrogiovanni-Tasca- Filangeri, 10th Prince of Cutò (1874-1942). (Lampedusa's mother, Beatrice Mastrogiovanni-Tasca di Cutò (1870-1946), was this man's older sister.) In the latter part of the 20th century the Palazzo was sold, and the new owners sought to capitalize on their purchase by putting up for sale some of its historic fittings, including old paintings cut from ceiling panels.
After the Second World War, Craven Keiller developed a factory in York to sell Butterkist branded popcorn direct to cinema chains. As many items were rationed in the UK post the Second World War, but the basic ingredients of Butterkist were not, the brand developed into the UK's lead selling popcorn brand. The sales of the brand then followed the development and decline in cinema audiences, so that after the boom of the 1950s and 1980s, by 1998 sales were on another downturn and Craven Keiller sold the brand to Cadbury Trebor Bassett, which in 2000 merged the brand into its Monkhill Confectionery subsidiary and moved production to Pontefract, West Yorkshire.Monkhill assumes Butterkist role Eurofood - 8 November 2001 As part of its development strategy selling off non-core brands, from April 2006 Cadbury Schweppes put Monkhill into a group of non-core brands it would review putting up for sale,Cadbury seeks a Butterkist buyer BBC News - 7 April 2006 and from June 2007 appointed investment bankers Investec to review the sale of Monkhill Confectionery, and its best selling brand Butterkist.

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