Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] of [art] [noun] [unc] " in BNC.
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1 | In her defence , Outram explained that the teaching had led quite naturally out of the children 's questions . |
2 | But apparently it was all out of the scientists ' control . |
3 | He plucked his sleeve gently out of the boy 's hand , and turned unhurriedly and walked out of the room . |
4 | So instead of a hero 's welcome , he was put in charge as an enemy alien to spend his eighteenth year in an internment camp . |
5 | For those who want a complete directory' not only of the world 's railways but also of manufacturers of railway equipment of every kind , from coaches to couplings , then Jane 's is your book — provided you have £50 to spare , which is £7 less than a second class return from London to Newcastle . |
6 | He enhances our sense not only of the poets ' universe — me cosmology of Dante and Milton , for example — but also of the symbolism used by painters and architects . |
7 | After a hearty cooked breakfast the next morning , Meryl hurried to the hall to find a good seat where she would get the best out of the professor 's lecture . |
8 | For example , the librarian will certainly have qualified and trained staff to help you get the best out of the library 's resources ( see Chapter 8 on more effective reading ) . |
9 | He said , ‘ Coffee , sir , ’ and offered the mug , though holding it just out of the President 's reach . |
10 | I would spend a miserable hour hopping from one foot to the other just out of the babies ' end with my eyes scrunched shut and my mouth in a knot . |
11 | Hearing the Credo of Padilla 's Mass , with its rhythmic life and impressive interplay between opposing choirs , makes one want to hear more both of the man 's music and of Mixolydian . |
12 | But he held a strong attraction for the the Duchess — and by now she was totally out of the Palace 's control . |
13 | By its end the State had assumed greater control than ever before of the nation 's economy and manpower resources . |
14 | It will be financed directly out of the firm 's profits . |
15 | SHARES were in limbo yesterday ahead of the Chancellor 's autumn statement due this afternoon . |
16 | Intel Corp has been less than enthusiastic about the future of its i860 — getting the 80586 into battle readiness in such a short space of time has taken up much of the company 's research and development resources in any case . |
17 | Well the centre is made up largely of the president er and the congress but the congress is made up of politicians elected from the states local , local politicians locally accountable . |
18 | The gorge walls , over 50 feet in places , came so close they nearly touched and , below , a river straight out of a canoeist 's toybox , not large by any standards but clean , powerful , unspoilt and appearing not to be reliant on heavy rainfall . |
19 | She looked as if she could have stepped straight out of an urchin 's game on the street of a Northern Italian village or off the front cover of Vogue . |
20 | He said when Mr Jones was taken to hospital to have his injuries looked at and photographed , he did not take the opportunity to be taken straight out of the Roberts ' home . |
21 | And , whatever the visual indications in the Sussex match , he whispered to me — marginally out of the skipper 's hearing — that he felt his natural skill was to spin the ball rather than flight . |
22 | Suddenly the dwarf was tearing himself wildly out of the trooper 's hands , his arms still pinioned , sliding past them towards the darkness behind . |
23 | The results were wildly ahead of the Democrats ' most optimistic forecasts . |
24 | Now the trick films came particularly out of the pioneers ' own attitude to their apparatus . |
25 | Vincent spoke almost enviously of the miners ' darkness , and the chance it gave them to reclaim the light . |
26 | Well , she 'd truly burned her boats now , Gina had been thinking as she gazed silently out of the Mercedes 's window at the passing scenery . |
27 | ‘ The Death of the Lion ’ , ‘ The private Life ’ and ‘ The Birthplace ’ all illustrate that the creation and reading of literature have nothing to do with the author as a real person , and that literature exists quite independently of the author 's particular circumstances and personality . |
28 | But here , in what visitors mistook for a tool shed , he was conveniently out of the world 's reach . |
29 | He furnished much of the office from his own resources although his annual salary of £250 was some 20% below the WEA 's nationally recommended minimum for District Secretaries — a reflection yet again of the District 's precarious financial position , then in deficit in excess of £100 . |
30 | They might want him or her to have a key , you know and er and just ran the keys up on a thing like that , you know what I mean , they was never out of the person 's possession . |