Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] out [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Everyone goes out on longer boards with the biggest sails they can handle , either sailing around the windsurf bay till the winds become gusty , or sailing upwind for lunch at the long beach .
2 Everyone goes out on longer boards with the biggest sails they can handle .
3 That way , your 30 days terms will mean 30 days instead of meaning anything from 30 to 60 days ( which averages out at 45 days or 50 per cent more days than 30 days ) .
4 Corbett grinned back ; a Welshman had once told him that each person has an aura about him , be it good or evil , which goes out to other people .
5 It is a situation which cries out for centralised resolution of the type the large commercial organisation can impose .
6 The second half of the chapter proposes that whole group work is a working method which develops out of small group work and gives greater coherence to it .
7 He estimated 8 x 108 tons transported annually to the sea , which works out at 0.025 kg per square metre of the sea floor .
8 And the if you put the character of Woodrow Wilson aside , the , the central theme which comes out of this book , which is I think why it 's important , worth reading certainly the introduction is worth reading .
9 Show you areas where you might benefit from further training , that 'll be , brum , brum , get yourself on a training course , yes ? and also we 're producing a which comes out in early February on training , which will list to all your managers everything that we do in training .
10 But , we know that April was a low figure , we also know that July and August are low a figure which comes out from this graph and was given to me by the director yesterday , is a genuine average which is turning out to be between a hundred and a hundred and ten placements per month twelve hundred to fourteen hundred placements per year a thr over a three year average residency period three thousand six hundred to four thousand two hundred placements in residential care , where then is the real problem .
11 The central empirical question which arises out of this perspective is : How far , in a given set of historical circumstances , do individuals feel constrained to bring their own timetables into line with family time by , for example , postponing certain transitions until the time is more auspicious for the family group as a whole ?
12 Detention is supervised by a custody officer who turns out on closer inspection to be a police officer with a different name .
13 He numbers among his close friends Patrick Hourcade of French Vogue , who looks out for fine furniture for him .
14 Of course , the poor individual buyer is the one who loses out in this sort of operation .
15 If she wants whatever it is she gets out of this relationship , no one can deny she 's entitled to it .
16 As Pottz said , ‘ Anyone who paddles out at big Pipe and says he 's not scared is either lying or crazy . ’
17 The project in question was Adam Adamant Lives , a less fantastic , if still fantasy-based , series about another time-traveller who comes out of suspended animation from 1902 into the ‘ Swinging London ’ world of 1965 .
18 If she comes out by that hole her only route must be through the cage , in which she is then recaptured .
19 When she comes out in nice clothes I say get them for modelling ?
20 Her education was heavily concentrated on languages , Latin , Spanish and Italian , even probably some Greek ; among her formal Latin letters , written as exercises , one stands out with ironic interest , for it was addressed to John Calvin .
21 Can we assume that something moves out of most buildings ?
22 According to Axelrod and Hamilton , ‘ It turns out in many cases that if a fig wasp entering a young fig does not pollinate enough flowers for seeds and instead lays eggs in almost all , the tree cuts off the developing fig at an early stage .
23 ‘ As Mr. Pannick says , it cries out for some explanation from the board .
24 The car 's fifteen years old , it stands out in all weathers , and the undercoat 's still intact . ’
25 It looks out across wide lawns to mild uneventful Northamptonshire countryside , and the private road which runs in front of it winds down into Hulcote , a beauti — ful horseshoe-shaped model village built around a generous green .
26 However , governments have for a long time been divided over how large a merger must be before it passes out of national hands to Brussels .
27 The fable sends the learned educationist home to divide Fred 's knowledge into parcels which he hands out to various expert textbook writers .
28 As Colin ( looking wasted as in exhausted ) goes off to the tour bus to sleep and Jhelisa disappears with a relative , he hangs out with various fans .
29 It reaches out to other Europeans — the new democracies who want to share the benefits we already enjoy .
30 They 're obviously going into a difficult area and if it breaks out into open conflict , there will be slight risk , but at the moment it 's fairly routine for us .
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