Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] out [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Runner-up to The Fellow in the King George before finishing a brave third to Cool Ground in the Gold Cup , Docklands Express should defy top weight with all of his rivals at least 7lb or more out of the handicap . |
2 | While the fish are spawning the females can be pushed into shallow water or even out of the pond . |
3 | Children cost twice as much to education there than they did in the outer London Boroughs , or indeed out in the styx as we are here in Oxfordshire . |
4 | Another time I went to St Kew primary , which is really small and right out in the middle of nowhere , and they made me feel really welcome . |
5 | ‘ I could hear their croaking and their arguments and they came ever nearer until suddenly out of the mist I saw the grey shadow of a wing and wet spike of a beak . |
6 | In a reference to continuing reports that more Soviet weapons had been moved east of the Ural mountains and thus out of the treaty area , the UK Defence Secretary Tom King raised doubts about whether the treaty process was going forward with " the degree of control and accuracy that was intended " . |
7 | Round and round went the rich , creamy milk , as the cool spring water flowed past , down through the three sloping troughs and away out of the yard . |
8 | Our film stock and equipment , which comprised some nine-tenths of our travelling weight , had to be husbanded first past the Pac-Man thicket of Customs and Immigration , thence through unpredictable months in the jungles , and finally out of the country again intact and undetained . |
9 | We tried lots of rehearsal spaces but they were all a rip off and totally out of the way . |
10 | Industry was geared up , under Lend Lease , to produce the armaments that would defeat Hitler , and also pull the country finally and forever out of the stagnation that had crippled it for a decade . |
11 | This will get your cavalry into close combat and hopefully out of the hail of missiles fairly quickly . |
12 | And they understand those devices and work with them very well , they 're not particularly interested in a mouse and all sorts of graphical facilities because their job in life is to get information quickly into and quickly out of the system . |
13 | However , midfielder Jason Ainsley will miss the game after picking up an ankle injury in midweek , and also out of the side is striker Andrew Shaw , who is suspended . |
14 | Typical English , thought Pamela , their first day and straight out into the midday sun . |
15 | He also looked sophisticated and wordly — and far out of the reach of someone like Ellie Browne . |
16 | And far out on the perimeter of empire in the Russian Middle East , where — apart from the mullahs — there was no intelligentsia , Russian colonization of the nomadic grazing lands made class conflicts over land and revolutionary land reform vital national issues . |
17 | Things look grim for the Dons — languishing third from the bottom of the Premier League — and now out of the Cup . |
18 | The brilliant blue eyes , hardly dimmed by his all too evident tiredness , shut , leaving Kate with tears pouring down her face as she gazed silently and unseeingly out of the window . |
19 | Most passengers had got across , and even out of the station altogether when the Barnstaple to Taunton train came around the bend under the bridge . |
20 | Even so , Ellie made sure she was upstairs and well out of the way when her father returned on Saturday . |
21 | Lauda added nine more points after leading from start to finish at Monaco while Hunt was again out of the scoring , and seemingly out of the championship . |
22 | The Smiths were completely and hilariously out of the reach of the general press . |
23 | If the liquid was meant to flow into the chamber from some high point on the hillside and then out to the tank supplying the house , it had given up in the hot weather and was no longer doing so . |
24 | Turner 's view that migrants move into the city slums and then out to the shanty towns , is not so much the case now since the large number of spontaneous housing settlements and the widespread knowledge of their existence make this sort of housing immediately available . |
25 | Cheerfully they got out of the car into the open day and went down the rocks to the strand and then out to the tideline . |
26 | One anxious mother , Jane Brooks , said : ‘ As people drive through and then out of the centre of Holybourne they seem to forget that speed restrictions still apply . |
27 | She gave me a long , disdainful , disappointed look and then out of the charity of her heart , graciously excused me thus : |
28 | But can we then be quite sure that at a later stage , when the same kind of performance has been taken out of the service and then out of the church , the signal is unambiguously to ‘ art ’ ? |
29 | and then out of the side which is which is nice . |
30 | Well , she 's been having an affair with this bloke for the last year or so and then out of the blue he turned round and … |