Example sentences of "[conj] [adv prt] of the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The investment weightings of the portfolio have continued to show an overwhelming bias towards publishing , which has accounted for 75% or over of the whole portfolio since June 1991 . |
2 | But the underlying idea of being at a loose end , or out of the practical swim , is a different matter altogether . |
3 | During the next few days I lived in terror , doors locked , ready to fly — to leave through the front door if Aunt Louise came to the back , or out of the back door if I saw her coming down the path . |
4 | The management of the economy through fiscal policy is assisted by the multiplier which magnifies any injection of expenditures or leakages of income into or out of the circular flow . |
5 | Twenty years back he must have been the most exciting man any girl could hope to meet , in or out of the British Army . |
6 | You could say that out of the simple song there came the poem capable of expressing in a short length deep thoughts . |
7 | To tell my story : because I was very conscious that out of the static situation of the servant being the one who was menacing the Judge I had to make an ongoing story . |
8 | It was not , as has been suggested , the popularity of the style among competitors which forced the judges to award a preponderance of prizes to designs in this style , as an examination of Clarke 's catalogue and the lists in various journals shows that out of the wide variety of stylistic appellations , it was largely those described as French Renaissance which were awarded prizes . |
9 | How interesting it was , thought Dyson , how extraordinarily intriguing , to find that out of the whole team the only one who was actually turning up trumps was himself . |
10 | Cranston made the man repeat the message as he reluctantly took than out of the main hall and up the wide , spacious stairs to one of the duke 's private chambers . |
11 | I think personalised shirts , or even any shirts may be asking for trouble if we are going to mingle rather than just get herded in and out of the away enclosure . |
12 | Out of this fundamental rationale , and out of the geographical proximity to Japan of colonies or potential colonies , grew a distinct set of colonial policies . |
13 | Not only is traffic on their motorways obstructing lorries going in and out of the vast Europoort , but public opposition to air pollution and the taking of scarce land for new roads is intense . |
14 | While their fingers flew in and out of the earthy heap of beans Rose and Victorine talked . |
15 | Or those three set apart , exceptional , and out of the straight line altogether ’ . |
16 | I walked out of the office and out of the European Cup . |
17 | The dancers inside the inn were all fetched to the door by Garvey roaring with demented laughter , slapping his thighs and reeling in and out of the streaming rain . |
18 | Other committee members were in and out of the new Law Centre , holding meetings , planning strategy , contacting people with wide experience of the sort of situation they found themselves in , and collating information . |
19 | If he cracks down on you , London would crack down on all the fringe people who go in and out of the Soviet network there . |
20 | Rayleigh and Jeans , who did their calculations by different methods , had both supposed that the energy seeped in and out of the black body in a perfectly continuous way . |
21 | In addition shipping into and out of the Jordanian port of Aqaba was seriously disrupted and remittance and aid income from both Iraq and Kuwait halted . |
22 | The crazy party lifted Sundays up and out of the traditional gloom . |
23 | Celia had been in and out of the Meadhaven Clinic three times now . |
24 | They were the ones nipping in and out of the general ruck , tapping ankles , trying to spray-paint out the windows and one of them even trying to set fire to a bunch of leaflets stuffed through Naamen 's letter-box . |
25 | Lord Joseph is now 71 , in the House of Lords and out of the political fray . |
26 | ‘ I 'm up and down the stairs and in and out of the bloody shelter like a hen on a hot griddle . |
27 | He did not come in the dawning , he did not come at noon ; And out of the tawny sunset , before the rise o " the moon , when the road was a gypsy 's ribbon , looping the purple moor , A red-coat troop came marching |
28 | I saluted then watched him as he barged along the corridor and out of the front door . |
29 | Her elation took her into her clothes , back to the kitchen to leave Phoebe a scrawled memo , and out of the front door . |
30 | Coffin saw him down the staircase and out of the front door , where they stood , still talking . |