Example sentences of "[be] out [prep] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Now supposing it is n't you that crossing the road , but you 're out with a young child .
2 We 've got a number of good pension funds that ordinary working people can join , but the issue that has come about since compulsory competitive tendering privatization is those members that 've been in pension funds for maybe twenty , twenty five years now they 're out on the open job market with the wonderful privatized world that we live in , with a free market , and they ca n't afford to make adequate pension provision for themselves .
3 Whenever we 're out together they wo n't go near a food shop , even if we 're out for the whole day .
4 I never worry when we 're out in a force-eight gale ; not if she 's in charge . ’
5 DON T BE MISLED , whether Socialists run in their true colours , or in an underhand way as ‘ Labour ’ or ‘ Cooperative ’ , they are out for the same end , and your only remedy is to VOTE THEM DOWN .
6 As it happens it would seem that most of those children are out on an English trip .
7 Border , who once said that the day Marsh and David Boon are out of the Australian side will be the day he goes as well , got back out on the ground soon enough , but he continued to fuel the fire by staying behind in Adelaide that evening while the rest of the team flew on to Perth to prepare for the fifth and final Test .
8 I must 've been out at the wrong time .
9 She had been out with a young lawyer once , a bumptious and ambitious man , and a boring one .
10 The Yorkshire captain has been out with a broken finger since the opening day of the championship season and it was thought he would not be fit until next week .
11 She 'd been out with an earlier crew .
12 The aircraft had a peculiar motion , rather like a small boat in a heavy ocean swell , or rather what I imagined that must feel like , never having been out on the open sea in a small boat .
13 I had n't been out for a long time , so I did it for the relaxation , really ! ’
14 The next thing is that when the vote comes to the General Secretary for the union , anyone who 's been out of the particular industry for longer than eighteen months wo n't be able to vote .
15 All being well , the skies will part once or twice during the festival — only the second time the event has been out in the open air .
16 While I 've been out in the fresh air enjoying myself she 's been stuck in this featureless boarding house , wondering if I 'll ever come back .
17 they might be out of the divisional area but you , they might just as well be for the amount of you 're spending on them .
18 About another three weeks we should be out of the real winter sha n't we ?
19 " We 're glad to be out of the bad weather , " he said .
20 ‘ A couple more of those and I shall be out of the main current , ’ he told himself wildly .
21 ‘ Do n't tell father that , ’ grinned Nellie , ‘ or he 'll be out on the next boat ! ,
22 The boat moved restlessly beneath them , as if impatient to be out on the open sea .
23 She had told no one that she would be out for the whole night ; the only person who had known had been Luke Calder .
24 ‘ He 'll be out at the Rotary Club dinner .
25 Sunsoft Inc has admitted that a fully binary shrink-wrapped version of Solaris 2.0 on Intel wo n't be out until the first quarter of 1993 .
26 NT for the Clipper will be out in the second half of 1993 .
27 Support for DEC 's Alpha Windows NT will be out in the first quarter of 1994 .
28 The company , which was to have introduced a mid-range , 80486-based TC1000 series of fault-tolerant systems earlier this year ( UX No 378 ) , says they 'll also be out in the first quarter of 1993 .
29 There was little room for lesbians to be out in the first half of this century , unless of course they moved in the right literary or aristocratic circles .
30 She was relieved to be out in the cool night air , but the journey home was an awkward one and she felt a little sorry for herself as she waited for her second bus .
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