Example sentences of "[adv] out [prep] [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Huy looked thoughtfully out through the curtains of the litter at the night sky , bright in the silence with the light of a million stars .
2 In business it is not uncommon for a seller ( X ) to sell large quantities of a commodity to a buyer ( Y Ltd. ) in the knowledge that Y Ltd. will be able to pay for them only out of the proceeds of re-selling them .
3 This presumption can be rebutted by any words indicating that the preferential dividend for a year is to be payable only out of the profits of that year .
4 They are ‘ normal events ’ , arising almost naturally out of the circumstances of the employment relationship itself : ‘ A wildcat can break out in perfectly normal conditions , and the structure of the relations between employers , trade unions , governments and workers guarantees that some strikes will grow from small beginnings into mighty struggles ’ ( p.241 ) .
5 Powerful , yet emotive , and sometimes melodramatic , The Power of One goes all out for the heartstrings with the weight of justice and the inevitability of history on its side .
6 The sun was high and bright as he dropped gently out of the hills towards the vale , faintly misted with vapour , and saw in the far distance before him the mole-hill of Ruthyn , hunched and veiled in the smoke of its house-fires , a delicate blue flower in the sparkling folded green , with the giant hogback of Moel Famau towering beyond .
7 There are many tales of naturalists who have gone to some place in search of a rare species , only to find that a member of that very species floats down out of the trees on gentle wings to besport itself before his amazed eyes , or appear in whatever appropriate manner to his appreciative gaze .
8 When by 1292 John of York had become too old and infirm to perform the duties of his Forest office , Edward I granted him a pension of ‘ three pence daily out of the issues of the forest , at the hands of the Justice of the Forest north of Trent , and six cartloads of firewood in the said forest by view and delivery of the foresters there ’ .
9 Our piloting suggests that there is very little information here which could not be filled in out of the heads of appropriate teachers on these courses , so filling in the questionnaire should not cost a great deal of time for each person .
10 Obviously they blamed the poor performance of students for the 15% and their ability to get the best out of the students for the 47% .
11 About his mastery of the mysteries of driving strategy and deriving the best out of the materials at hand , there is unanimous consent .
12 A believer in market forces , she differs from Thatcher in her interventionism , and it is a safe bet that what the French euphemistically call ‘ positive actions ’ will be brought to bear to shake the best out of the likes of Thomson .
13 A fine judge of a player , a skilled diplomatist , he has secured many good players for Northampton at very little cost to the club , whilst his tact and cheery optimism has resulted in his getting the best out of the men at his command . ’
14 The change occurred because of internal political reasons and for that reason alone and not out of the interests of clients .
15 In consequence , the identity of English studies during the inter-war period was forged , not out of the discourses of the Newbolt Report , but rather in terms of the subject 's consolidation as an autonomous academic discipline and learned profession .
16 Wendy Watson hit 153 not out for the tourists against NZ 's Under-23 XI at Napier .
17 With the growth of towns , the coming of the Industrial Revolution , and the improvements in surface transportation , the pattern in all but the staple industries changed and the whole industrial and commercial structure grew ( and grows ) increasingly more diverse and complex , to the extent that it moves ever more out of the realms of the local researcher into those of the economic or social historian working at national , or even international , level .
18 A national curriculum centrally determined is about to be imposed on the schools , and this is bound to encapsulate a philosophy of education , its nature and purpose , that arises directly out of the discontents of the last twenty years .
19 The theme for this seminar arose directly out of the discussions at the previous meeting on Integration and Immigration .
20 Amongst the dust and waste , characters who might have stepped straight out of the pages of Dickens or Mrs Gaskell bloomed .
21 On Kenya 's border with Tanzania are the internationally known Serengeti and Maasai Mara reserves , where the annual migration of millions of wildebeeste and zebras to warmer northern parts forms a wondrous spectacle straight out of the pages of ‘ Out of Africa ’ .
22 Take Castell Coch , a Victorian fantasy straight out of the pages of ‘ Sleeping Beauty ’ , situated just north of Cardiff .
23 Her family history is equally dramatic and could almost have come straight out of the pages of a Barbara Cartland novel .
24 Twin beds were a put-off ; a typically American idea straight out of the movies by way of the Hayes censorship office .
25 The larvae can dive straight out of the grains of sand into your skin , and for weeks you itch and get blisters as the larvae spiral round and round just beneath the skin , leaving patterns behind .
26 They drove huge concrete piers ( totalling 13 kilometres in length ) straight out from the beaches into the shallow Baltic .
27 He got up in his night-shirt and looked incredulously out at the twigs of the stately chestnut tree in front of the castle .
28 If the shares are purchased wholly or partly out of the proceeds of a fresh issue and the amount of the proceeds is less than the nominal value of the buy-back shares , the difference must be transferred to the capital redemption reserve ( s170(2) ) .
29 Blinking in the sunshine that fell on his face , Tug swam up out of the horrors of the darkness .
30 For many it was their first introduction to a New Age in which the governments and countries would fall or be changed , society and the family would expire and a new order would rise up out of the ashes of old values and beliefs .
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