Example sentences of "out to [adj] " in BNC.

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1 These include : pedal cycles for a clinic allowing nurses to get out to outlying villages ; health care kits to help with the care of patients in their own homes ; training for different agencies ; and a variety of education initiatives .
2 Certainly , when Yeats chaired the Irish Senate committee that commissioned the Irish coinage ( so wonderfully handsome as it turned out to be ) , it was photographs of Sicilian Greek coins that went out to prospective designers to show them what the committee had in mind .
3 Mr Yeo sent us her CV — the one they send out to prospective clients .
4 forms out to prospective employers .
5 During the 1980s there was evidence of harsher punishments being handed out to reckless drivers , and of a wider appreciation of the risks created and the misery inflicted by deviations from proper standards of driving .
6 The next five years saw the site leased out to various tenants , although Knight retained ownership .
7 The fable sends the learned educationist home to divide Fred 's knowledge into parcels which he hands out to various expert textbook writers .
8 Wings , tail unit , undercarriage , radiators and other sundry items were sent out to various workshops of the ‘ warbird ’ industry , but the team still needed a full time project leader .
9 After the plans had been shelved , the whole place had been leased out to various small-time manufacturers and warehousemen ; the broken-down sheds and godowns must still be the property of somebody , so too must be the piles of crates whose stencilled lettering had long since faded to pallor .
10 My heart went out to poor Aunt Louise .
11 Someone buys a house , gets a mortgage and then rents it out to poor gits like them .
12 In response to the demands of the Grain Trade , further expansion was carried out to Imperial Grain Warehouse resulting in additional bulk silo storage of 15,000 tons .
13 Events must play themselves out to aesthetic , moral and logical conclusion .
14 But the company which has built most of the world 's most impressive superstructures could be in danger of losing out to Korean competition .
15 The Newsons suggest these associations stand out to such an extent that they ‘ can be fairly assumed to be causative ’ .
16 The church could perhaps think how it might reach out to such people , and offer facilities and friendships that make life easier for people to face while they search for meaning in their lives .
17 Why did this upright shipmaster sell out to such a crowd ? "
18 Well , we do n't mind helping out readers , but do n't you think a brochure of forthcoming events including details on the vibrant club scene would be a handy item to send out to similar inquiring minds ?
19 One of the modifications carried out to correct this was the replacement of the light alloy material of the inner torsion box top skin with stainless steel .
20 If he took all his clients out to expensive lunches , invited them to concerts …
21 Much of Muskie 's political fame was earned from his leadership in environmental affairs , which was now being eroded not only by Nixon 's proposals but also by a Ralph Nader report on air pollution which strongly criticized Muskie 's role in the past and just stopped short of accusing him of selling out to industrial polluters ( Lundqvist , 1980 ) .
22 Australia 's Wally Masur also flew home with $100,000 under his belt after going out to seventh-seeded Czech Petr Korda 2-6 , 7-5 , 6-4 .
23 Some British armoured cars came and began shooting from a distance , and in the chaos I shouted out to four or five brother officers and we drove off in a truck .
24 In the next three weeks the same treatment was handed out to four more castles : Genzac , Marcillac , Grouville and Anville .
25 Actually it comes out to four hundred cos I have n't drawn these properly come up come out to three fifty .
26 Okar also referred to the " dishonourable treatment " meted out to former Defence Minister Lt.-Gen.
27 Existing waste disposal operations will have to be put out to private or arms-length companies so the local authority 's policing role can not be mixed with its disposal role .
28 The thousands of redundancies , in the cause of ‘ economies ’ , owe most to government insistence on having 25 per cent of programmes farmed out to private enterprise with its higher regard for profit than for human dignity .
29 In order to economise , the officers of some parishes put their workhouses out to private contract ; this practice — an early example of privatisation — was known as ‘ farming the poor ’ .
30 Not only was it , in Horton , recreating the age of the large mental hospital , but also it was seeking exemption from the DHSS requirement that health authorities put their ancillary services out to private tender .
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