Example sentences of "[modal v] [vb infin] out [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Prospects : A pattern which may evolve out of the failures above ; its failure , however , could produce a turning of the tables and the triumph of :
2 Using other kinds of evidence , we must move out to the localities , and the counties .
3 However , you should point out to the parents any overlap between problems .
4 ‘ I 'll go out to the fields for a few hours to try to work off some of this . ’
5 If there is a tunnel , then I reckon it 'll come out in the woods somewhere to the north of the fence an' close to it .
6 They might find out during the days to follow .
7 Had he not better make that clear to both the Conservative and Labour Members who still believe that Britain could stay out of the developments that will take place in Europe ?
8 All he needed — as far as anyone could make out from the hogsheads of salted pilchards that were assembled in two separate groups at the harbour — was one more good catch and victory , together with Martha 's hand , would be his .
9 Neither Dobson nor Hunter is eligible to play for Ulster in next season 's inter pros , but they could line out with the Exiles Under-21s .
10 ‘ She did n't say that , ’ he replied , the ebullience with which he 'd set out for the Greens ' household nowhere to be seen .
11 I could step out between the bars , and a day like this declared every reason for the risk .
12 When the wind was south-westerly , and it usually was , they made the hearth at the north end of the house so that the smoke could filter out through the stones .
13 You could go out to the walkways , you could talk to somebody twenty four hours a day .
14 I really think , although I would not be prepared to put it to the test , that you could go out in the streets of London in your nightdress and nobody would notice .
15 Prior to the moratorium on meetings , the committee had highlighted the following issues as meriting urgent attention : ( 1 ) the need for " more information about what other departments could get out of the resources now that there was considerable potential " ;
16 With the words had come the fleeting impression of dark , sinuous creatures who could slither out of the shadows and wind their cold , serpentine fingers about you , so that you were trapped , who could twine about your entire body , so that you were smothered and suffocating from the cold embrace …
17 Funny I used to sleep on the side of banks , you could dig out on the banks , sleep , sit on the oh yeah .
18 Reginald Bray , who was associated with the settlement movement in Camberwell , even seemed to doubt whether the youths needed to sleep , describing in 1904 how they would stay out on the streets ‘ until it is dark , and often in summer until dawn begins to break … the street and not the house ought probably to be regarded as the home ’ .
19 As Tiguary announced the plan to the assembled chiefs , Dulé could see the scene in his mind 's eye : the fire licking up one mast , then leaping in the rigging to the other , snaking through the spars , then falling in sparks , and setting the decks to smouldering while sleepy men sloshed water about with the balers , yelling orders to one another , until , when the flames had lit up all the timbers and the ship blazed in a transparent lattice of spars and ribs , her defenders would fling themselves into the sea and the warriors would swoop out of the shallows and fall on them : it would be as easy as catching fish .
20 Rather , I would like to see developed a Code of Practice binding on doctors which would grow out of the views of all interested parties : doctors , patients , and the public .
21 Mid morning he would yell out to the trainees during lulls in activity : " Everyone off the phone " When all had complied , he instructed them each to write on a piece of paper ten numbers out of the 40 that corresponded with the internal telephone lines .
22 A screen of local officers would fan out across the fields to fend off the curious seeking to approach cross-country .
23 He called for a ‘ radical ’ agenda that would reach out to the groups of voters , especially in the South of England , which have shown a marked reluctance to support Labour at four elections .
24 Initially , it seemed that control of surveyors ' education would pass out of the hands of the membership of the Institution and into those of the academics .
25 . ’ Another woman , repeating with incredulity that such things could happen while the Führer was standing by his soldiers at the Front in the fight against Bolshevism , said blessings would go out from the crucifixes in the schools ‘ not only for the children themselves , but also for our Führer and his soldiers , who are our sons , fathers , and brothers ’ .
26 It might even be , she thought hopefully , that a strip of sticky paper would come out with the stamps , so that she could repair the tear in the envelope !
27 If the flow rate should increase for any reason , the lava may burst out over the levees , flooding out to form a new branch of the main flow , and this ‘ break out ’ will itself rapidly become established between levees .
28 Some of the huge flocks of Scandinavian thrushes ( fieldfare , redwing , and song-thrush mainly ) which pass through in spring and autumn , will enter the traps but the majority will stay out on the hillsides .
29 All of those er folders will go out to the parents .
30 We will go out against the Moors and give them battle , and God who hath thus far shown favour unto us will still continue to be our helper .
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