Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] go out [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 I 've had two or three I think , very rarely do we find them and shapers tend to go out on a limb they tend to want to lead they tend to want to control they want people to follow their way they do tend to be the people that dig in and say you know this is the way we do it .
2 hurricane has gone out of the news now , once something like that has happened there 's always another disaster coming behind that actually takes over the headlines , so , about six months , a year , two years afterwards they were still finding that in parts of Europe the general level of nuclear activity was higher than it had been before Chernobyl , why would that happen ?
3 It 's reassuring to know that even beautiful actresses worry about what they 're gong to wear to go out in the evening .
4 The brashness had gone out of the sunlight , and the air had a chill .
5 Leaflets calling for this protest action had gone out in the name of the underground organization Mwakenya , and were echoed in a BBC World Service broadcast by the exiled writer Ngugi wa Thiongo , but workers were urged by the official Central Organization of Trade Unions to ignore the " seditious leaflets " , and commentators noted an understandable reluctance to identify openly with Mwakenya by supporting its strike call .
6 Local accountability has gone out of the window ; Ministers no longer even talk about it , because they know that it is not a reality .
7 It was dusk , and the evening was as still and airless as the previous one when , impatient for news , Zen had gone out for a stroll .
8 If you say that the Nationalists of Ireland have a right to claim to go out of the united Kingdom as a community if you say that five or six per cent of the whole of the United Kingdom have that right because they wish to have separate rule for themselves , how can you say that a body in Ireland , not five or six per cent , but twenty-five per cent of the whole population , has not an equal right to separate treatment ?
9 It had not been lived in recently it had none of that slight warmth of humanity you find in a dwelling whose inhabitant has gone out for the day .
10 Did n't fishermen like to go out into the middle of lakes to fish ?
11 I never did believe that , as the coroner seemed to think , because of one of her mental lapses Grandma had gone out into the garden in her nightie and just fallen into the stream by mistake .
12 The court hinted that the accused was guilty even though not all of the goodness had gone out of the property .
13 A Teesside inquest heard how Wayne had gone out for a spin in the W-reg white Ford Escort with four pals in November last year .
14 ‘ The reason we have had so many problems of late is that the fizz has gone out of the market , ’ Abrahams says .
15 The other children pulled his leg and generally teased him about what he had seen but the child strenuously defended his story ; somehow the fun had gone out of the adventure and they decided to return home .
16 All the fun had gone out of the game .
17 Certainly the sting had gone out of the words ; I could think of them without being quite so ashamed .
18 For instance , the beginning could be ‘ It was a nice sunny day and all the fishes decided to go out for a swim .
19 We believe that the principle of accountability in local democracy has gone out of the window under this Government .
20 Most analysts have now cut their first quarter forecast , and the views now range from a loss of 64 cents a share to a profit of eight cents — and David Wu of S G Warburg has gone out on a limb with forecast $0.80 a share loss .
21 One hour later I had recovered consciousness , was lying drugged and bloodless in my bed , and my father had gone out with the shotgun he owned then to look for Old Saul .
22 Members began to go out into the country on day trips , and the first cricket match between two deaf clubs in the country , which later led to the formation of inter-institute sports activities of billiards , darts , and other sports , took place on 23rd July 1892 at Manchester between Manchester Deaf and Dumb Institute and the Bolton and Bury Institutes .
23 The crowd of women and the big man had gone out into the street , but the thin man remained ; and he looked from the child towards the closed door before he , too , turned and went out .
24 All the shine had gone out of the evening .
25 And speak your own language , please : we 'll even teach it to you in our schools to prove how understanding we are , just so long as you do our dirty work for less wages than our own kind are prepared to accept : just so long as you keep yourselves to yourselves , and do n't let your children marry ours , because what we 're all terrified of , so terrified the word 's gone out of the vocabulary .
26 Nearly all children want to go out in the snow and , if they are suitably dressed , they can have many mathematically rewarding experiences as well as lots of fun .
27 Though the Welsh version continues to go out on the day it is filmed , the new audience will be regaled with story lines familiar to the Welsh audience a few weeks later .
28 At best , he would now only send fresh generals against the Christian force ; but even after El Cid 's death , much of the heart had gone out of the Moorish invaders .
29 The heart had gone out of the day .
30 Jilly Cooper had agreed to a revision of the promotional leaflet she featured in last year , and a mailing had gone out to every secondary and primary school in the UK .
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