for to

prepositional phrase, in order to

“They used it for to pack the fish in when they shipped it.”

“I wanted to go up town one night. I had a 50 dollar bill, and I wanted to change it for to take a taxi uptown.”

“I remember we always had chickens and geese and turkeys. And I remember them getting them ready for to go over to the market on Saturday morning.”

“It’s a large parking lot, but used to be all lawns, and they would set up tables and sell things, and put on things for to raise money.”

“I had cigars ahead of me and cigarettes and a pipe and all, and I’d smoke and that and for to put in time, you know.”

“I was kind of fortunate when you think about it, because like my dad, well two or three times a week, he’d be taking whey cream to the 1:00 boat for to ship to the creamery in Kingston.”

“In the meantime you pumped up the air on the air tank for to push the coal oil through and into the burner.”

“I can remember that quite vividly one of the worst spills I ever got on a bicycle. I went up to the store for to get my mother’s groceries, and I had a big, big basket on the front of my bike. And I had all the groceries piled in there.”

“They must have used wood for to heat the boilers.”

“You gotta pay that. Like how the hell are you gonna come up with the money, you know, for to pay them this month?”