Example sentences of "[verb] out [prep] the [adj -er] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 But for such degenerates as Cade , or these two , Shakespeare can also deprive his prose of rhythm , make it flaccid , shapeless , a difficult mouthful to get out : Caliban 's verse stands out with the greater force , cured as he now is of his delusions : But — so at least the juxtaposition suggests — that is in part the judgement that verse can make over prose .
2 If you want to find out about the better side of cruising catamarans , phone for details .
3 It was a pleasure to discover that it had escaped the sort of wholesale restoration so commonly carried out in the earlier part of this century .
4 The differential was too small to have a big impact , and , when it was publicised at all , was accompanied by assurances that the cost would be cancelled out by the lower summer charge .
5 When our dad died , we were turned out by the Bridgewater agent .
6 The only area in which it loses out to the deeper-bodied F-model is on sheer projection , and I could well imagine some players foregoing that extra bit of welly just for the comfort and convenience of the LSE 's thin body .
7 Robert Green went further in his services to the trade , hiring out to the smaller undertaker those items required for an up-market funeral .
8 Hazel came out on the farther side of the ilexes and followed the path round a bend .
9 Pupils are receiving occult teaching , and are studying the science of life — before going out into the larger world to relieve the stress of humanity , to teach mankind the Divine Wisdom , God 's Plan for the World , Evolution — to bring happiness to the unhappy , peace to the warring , and the only true happiness is found through service and brotherhood .
10 Where the main dale leaves the National Park and opens out into the flatter farmland of the old North Riding is Wensley itself , now a tiny village compared to its bigger neighbour of Leyburn , a busy typical northern Dales town with its wide main street and broad pavements laid out for market stalls .
11 She was vaguely aware of being guided expertly away from the crowded floor , and it was n't until they stepped out into the cooler night air that she realised how much of a relief it was to leave the noise behind .
12 This is a bit of the continent , sticking out into the warmer sea to the south-east .
13 Should you decide to stick to sherry and branch out into the heavier aloroso you will have a thick head tomorrow and we will have an entertaining evening . ’
14 But Tsu Ma had turned already and was wading out into the deeper water .
15 to me that it would be perverse of us to fall into the trap if we were to do so of endorsing Policy E two and not know that what we were endorsing was in fact what the Secretary of State specifically rejected on the grounds perhaps that it was unduly restricted or detailed or inappropriate for some of those other reasons that are set out in the earlier part of that notice of approval .
16 It may be considered that a three year period in 7.6.5 is too long and that two years is an adequate period for reinstatement to take place , but the landlord will probably hold out for the longer period .
17 The products will initially be manufactured in the US , though the possibility that Olivetti could one day manufacture them in Europe , for Europe , has not been ruled out in the longer term .
18 Variety headlines spin out of the papier maché mist and chart the rise of a career .
19 It 's as if you 'd gone out into the bigger world and found out that it 's frightening or that it hurts , so you go home .
20 Such principles are those which have been worked out by the larger society , not doctors alone , and which embody the moral , philosophical , and spiritual assumptions of that society .
21 The material taken out of the higher point of the site was deemed unsuitable for use at the lower end .
22 Blow through the small hole so the contents come out of the larger hole on to the saucer .
23 After a brief interval a reply in a lower key by a similarly religious bird came from what appeared to be a hummock of ivy on a small promontory which jutted out at the further end of the mere .
24 The ‘ edges ’ are an almost continuous series of jagged scarps or outcrops where the hard carboniferous sandstone juts out from the softer rock which has been worn away by the elements over millions of years .
25 In the former , it is perhaps the inadequacy of Earendel that is more prominent than his partial success ; at the end of the poem his light is blotted out by the greater light of dawn .
26 Helping women to stay at home yet giving them an occupation , some money and a branch held out towards the wider community were all worthy goals in Laura 's eyes .
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