Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] [adv prt] of the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 An ill-defined report of a possible murder comes out of the small racing town of Lambourn .
2 When a rampant piano breaks out of the ecstatic trance midway through we 're two-nil up before the record 's even half way through and , with the arrival of a melancholy eastern vocal further up the touchline , it 's turning into a whitewash .
3 The wording of the concession would seem to suggest that if the husband moves out of the matrimonial home and makes no election that his new home is his main residence then he need do nothing further , since on any subsequent transfer of the former matrimonial home to his former wife the principal private dwelling house exemption will be available ( provided she has continued to live there ) .
4 This article comes out of the familiar experience of being drawn to a particular image , or set of images , without at first knowing why , and the attempt to account for this feeling .
5 Only when the front of the slug passes out of the far end of the pipe does the fraction of the pipe length in laminar motion increase .
6 The National Rivers Authority , which has imposed the tough new standards , says they will bring the sewage works out of the dark ages .
7 A great noise rises out of the quiet , and the stars are like bits of metal clinging together .
8 As the gas leaks out of the coiled chamber it picks up water and forms a mist around the singer 's head .
9 The area cost adjustment which the er government takes out of the total S S A's of some two hundred million has gone to the south-east , I hope none goes to Westminster , and that has cost us one point three million .
10 During the eighteenth century there were signs of the first rumblings of the tectonic upheaval which shattered the old order in Europe , and from its ruins created a group of nation states out of the submerged nations which lay under the surface of the great multinational empires .
11 Nor would it come as a total shock to discover that the world pulls out of the next slump the same way it did out of the last one , with a catastrophic world war . ’
12 The project arises out of the 1984 Montgomery Report 's recommendation for research into the viability of the Gaelic language and the institutional framework of public policy-making affecting prospects for its maintenance .
13 A thousand-legged worm crawls out of the severed wrist .
14 The second shape comes out of the first like the extension of an igloo .
15 If one partner opts out of the physical caring , decision-making and adolescent crises at the expense of the other , a load of resentment and dissatisfaction soon builds up .
16 At this moment a lion bursts out of the long grass and bush and leaps on a warrior .
17 Rationalists and moralists have always been at least a little uneasy about admitting that so much that they most value comes out of the vast area of human behaviour which shares the spontaneity of physical events .
18 I am still firmly of the belief that I like to walk out of the client 's house with a cheque , because that 's a commitment , and then the next premium comes out of the direct debit .
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