Example sentences of "[verb] out of [art] [noun pl] ['s] " in BNC.

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1 One year , I remember , he gave us half an hour on John McEnroe being slung out of the Men 's Singles .
2 And the lads used to go and pinch out of the girls ' bags .
3 Subsection ( 7 ) deals with cases where a deposit has been made out of a clients ' account or the like .
4 ‘ When we played MCC at Lord 's they had 10 county captains , if I remember rightly , and one player , J.W. Hearne , came out of the players ' gate , and the rest came out through the main entrance .
5 It must be added that they were the better team , had the outstanding individual in Gordon Strachan and deserved the victory procured by a touch of finesse which could have Vinny Jones drummed out of the cloggers ' union .
6 Clearly the phasing out of the serf-owners ' authority and of traditional dues did provide an immediate improvement in peasant conditions , and the opportunity to buy land increased peasant security .
7 Edberg is the sixth seed to go out of the men 's championship after a record five seeds were beaten in the first round .
8 The workers in gold spilled out of the Goldsmiths ' Bazaar and into the surrounding streets and alleyways .
9 One Tory MP was seen coming out of the Whips ' office in tears before last night 's vote .
10 THE catalogue of horror stories coming out of the banks ' treatment of their customers seems to have no effect on the high-handed , arrogant way they behave .
11 The point is not merely that decisions about the day to day operation of the business or even long-term strategy have been taken out of the shareholders ' hands — this is the intended , central advantage of the corporate form — but that the shareholders are no longer able to shape the purpose for which the business is run , that is , they are unable to oblige management to maximise profits .
12 Such value-judgments surely arise out of the critics ' disappointment at finding negative aspects in an otherwise positive projection , an all-too-human aspiration for avoiding reality which Leonard refuses to do , to his great cost .
13 The point is nicely illustrated by an important case arising out of the miners ' strike of 1984–85 .
14 On 13 October 1988 an order was made by Master Munrow directing the trial as a preliminary issue of certain questions arising out of the plaintiffs ' notice of objection .
15 But stocks and shares have the potential of earning quite a high income for the holder , not only in terms of the dividends paid out of the firms ' profits , but also in terms of the capital gain from any increase in the shares ' prices .
16 The pension of £150 was to be paid out of the Goldsmiths ' endowment of £290 .
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