Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] out [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 a talisman , a passport — and with Wood seeing them out onto the empty streets , he moved off through the cool , misty town , into Newlands Valley , over towards Buttermere , his heart hammering him on to get back to her before it was too late .
2 At last Cranston finished his further refreshment and , with Benedicta so close beside him his heart kept skipping for joy , Athelstan led them out into the great cleared area of Smithfield .
3 And then he led them out of the small room .
4 Snorting at the friar 's apparent stupidity , Cranston turned his horse and led them out of the main alleyways of Southwark .
5 It is clear that the derivation of the high number of word paths from mid-classes and the problem of filtering them out at the lexical access stage means that syntactic/semantic information must be brought to bear as soon as words are accessed .
6 Rescuers have tried unsuccessfully to drive them out into the open sea using a line of boats with their engines running .
7 Meanwhile , the Whips pursued the government in the hope of catching them out in a snap vote ; at the least this would disrupt their progress and there seemed an outside chance that the government would tire of the interminable pressure and throw in the sponge .
8 By promoting economic aspects and bringing them out into the open for everyone to see , we are contributing towards better informed decisions on the part of prescribers and policy makers alike . ’
9 Linear earthworks were the means of manipulating , channelling and containing vast flows of terrestrial energy , drawing them out of the central plateau area of the chalk uplands and leading them , sometimes for miles , towards places where they were required to boost the existing subtle currents .
10 It is then the truck drivers push them out of the moving cab .
11 SIR — After watching the England soccer team 's drab display in Prague , I am tempted to say that if the FA send them out in a nondescript kit , their performance will mirror their appearance .
12 He 'd flick them out with an old hickory shafted wedge and say , ‘ Keep going , son . ’
13 That means keeping them out of the unpredictable British May weather .
14 I was sure that his status as head of the herd helped me out in an unpleasant encounter .
15 General Dynamics and McDonnell Douglas , builders of the super-expensive A-12 fighter for the United States Navy , want the Pentagon to bail them out of a possible $2.7 billion overrun on the development and production of A-12s .
16 ‘ That 's the thanks I get for takin' ye out of a bloody hovel and givin' ye a proper place to live .
17 She flushed , as if he had caught her out in a social solecism .
18 In spite of his explanations they 'd insisted on signing him out at the little cabin , and he 'd snatched the case out of his car and run back , wondering why it always rained .
19 Dinah felt herself trembling ; this was the man who had libelled Paul and herself , had made their early years wretched , had hounded her out of the only world she knew .
20 Korda let him out on a three-picture deal with Fox , continued to pay him $15,000 a year but would take a large slice of what Fox paid him : from the three pictures Richard would earn about £80,000 .
21 But he was smiling as they helped him out of the herbaceous border .
22 Less than two hours later , a city-centre taxi let her out under the lighted awning of the hotel by the park .
23 Erm I 've not done this before and I wanted to try it out with a small group like yourselves to see how we go on with it .
24 The district council then had to spend almost £250,000 to bail it out of a financial crisis .
25 If you try that with erm a piece of wood , you try to pull it out into a long thin wire it would just break .
26 I tried it out on a modest 386SX and it still felt fast on a big test database .
27 And grabbing three of the smallest around their necks , he started pushing them out of the back door , into the fresh air , and towards the outer door of the boarding section .
28 Rather they preferred to farm them out at a fixed rent , at leases which , in the fourteenth century , became progressively longer , and to enjoy the freedom to take up offices or to serve in the army .
29 She drawls them out with a heavy English accent .
30 A few weeks earlier he had phoned me out of the blue — I think he was checking to see how many of his cronies were still alive !
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