Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] go out [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I hate going out in the carriage , ’ I said quickly .
2 I 'd gone out on the boat
3 I like to go out among the diners and discuss the menu with them .
4 Nonetheless , I started going out with the Thai development workers , to visit villages and meet the people I would be working with for the next two years .
5 ‘ Because I only found the portrait — I was only able to identify the man in her diary when I had to go out to the cottage last Saturday .
6 I had gone out into the garden , closing the scullery door as quietly as I could .
7 I was copying all the afternoon ( Piero ) and I was in the sort of mood where normally I have to go out to the cinema or to a coffee-bar , anywhere .
8 I wonder if that washing 's done , let's have a look , I have to go out in the shed and get the erm no its not er , its not finished yet
9 I became incredibly vi er I had violent feelings erm , I wanted to go out on the street and rampage .
10 Well he said that does n't give you long to go out on the razzle .
11 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 .
12 Well she 'd gone out through the door and the wind took her down the bloody street !
13 June Roberts said she 'd gone out in the car , saying nothing except that she 'd be back in time for cocktails at the Clarkes ' as she had promised , a business thing for Samuel .
14 Yeah that 's a nice er , slot , were you looking to go out in the garden ?
15 And so by incessant exercise , her right foot grew larger and broader , while the other remained the same size , and at length she feared to go out in the streets at all , for fear of tripping and falling flat .
16 A teacher , again in a Southall primary school , told of an ‘ amusing ’ incident when an Indian girl of ten was reduced to tears when she had to go out in the sun in the summer term .
17 She had gone out to the Windmill for ale while he contented himself in the kitchen .
18 She had gone out to the drug store to get a bottle of milk for Maria 's bedtime cocoa , and when she got back to the suite , Bernie was in her section taking off Maria 's dress .
19 So he turned away from the mirror and walked towards the weak sunlight ; she had gone out to the balcony , it was warm in the September sunshine .
20 When it came to her last day at home , she had gone out into the garden for a final look round .
21 ‘ When did you last go out of the house ? ’ he asked suddenly .
22 After we split up he started going out with a woman who wanted to go out on the town every night — like him . ’
23 You have to go out for the kids , you have to go to the schools and sign autographs .
24 and she 'll go and get the milk out and say I 've just got myself a glass of milk mum , oh right , okay not even aware that she 's gone out to the fridge you know , fair enough we say ah , you do n't do you ?
25 We 're going to make a pilot and we hope to go out on the network next year … on Central .
26 Something had gone out of the day , Caroline thought , but what ?
27 Anyway , the Chinese seem excessively embarrassed and concerned about an incident of this type , and we have been kept under very careful supervision ( I am sure for our sakes , in their eyes ) whenever we have gone out of the hotel .
28 Yeah well two of mine did go in , one 's gone out into the fire service and the other one has stayed in and he 's got , he , he 's been doing very well , he 's been in a big big comprehensive school up in Runcorn , and then he 's been seconded to Cheshire County to the advisory service for a couple of years and so , hello !
29 I assaulted this position from every angle , ranging from thoughtful analyses of the male mid-life crisis , its nature and origins , to sweeping ad absurdum dismissals in which I demonstrated that by the same token Trish and Brian were equally culpable , because if they 'd gone out for the day I would have stayed at home and we would never have met in the first place .
30 But they insisted to go out of the front . ’
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