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

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1 If this is what we hear inside with the canopies sealed , God knows how it must sound out on the tarmac !
2 Nothing would do but we must go out on the river .
3 Then we 'll go out on the road .
4 ‘ I 'll go out on the square and into the city 's ear .
5 Give me a moment or two to change my clothes and leave a note for Jules , then we 'll go out on the town . ’
6 Mum that 'll come out on the tape !
7 As well as faster , smaller versions of the existing 21064 part , there will be a second-generation 21164 line — EV5 and EV56 — that 'll start out on the road from 200MHz to 300MHz .
8 Only the score and what we could work out on the piano and what we were able to hear in the opera-house from singers like Mayr .
9 ‘ Very nice , ’ said Joe , eyeing the purchases , she 'd set out on the bed , ‘ but explain why it 's taken you all day . ’
10 We 'd go out on the town , hit a few cocktail parties , go dancing , and I 'd drop a few hundred quid on a weekend . ’
11 He remembered it from childhood , a lugubrious , undistinguished tune which , as a ten-year-old , he could pick out on the drawing-room piano .
12 Phillips thinks the research councils could lose out on the transfer .
13 You mean to say you could go down our steps there and if you keep goin' you 'd come out on the water ? ,
14 If you 'd come out on the gig with me you could have held it for me .
15 Funny I used to sleep on the side of banks , you could dig out on the banks , sleep , sit on the oh yeah .
16 But now other victims like Damaris may miss out on the help they need .
17 • Nocturnal or crepuscular ( evening-time ) fish may miss out on the food if you do not give them their rations just before lights out .
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 But the ‘ equivalents are simply not as good , so I would splash out on the Rocon Digistat .
20 He , at least , kept his hands off the Girls but he did flirt with Nellie 's young nieces whom he would take out on the quiet .
21 And so erm we did n't wan na put them off and I like to be here because erm Bob likes to go on the Moor as well , so we shall go out on the Moor with the dog a couple of times
22 The house screws would stand out on the avenue to make sure that you did n't stop and talk .
23 But just as they were becoming sexy , she would leave the room and go to bed , while he would stretch out on the sofa and watch TV .
24 Despite the rigours of the time , whenever there was a stand-down aircrews — generally headed by Canadians — would get out on the airfield and they would mark out a pitch and play baseball .
25 In May the Girls would sit out on the steel fire escapes during shows and write home complaining about the unaccustomed heat .
26 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 .
27 Without the villus a visitor would see very little in Wilpattu , though occasionally a day-hunting leopard will step out on the road , or a sloth bear stand 6 ft ( 1.8 m ) high as it reaches for the fruit , honey or tree termites on which these fierce-looking predators feed .
28 A lot of people will miss out on the chance . ’
29 The chief one is the interference caused by its broadcasts , which will go out on the frequency of channel 37 , to which many domestic VCRs and some satellite receivers are tuned .
30 It will follow that , unless they have been sunk into prepared grooves , the horizontal cords will stand out on the spine as pronounced ridges , and the leather or other covering will have to be moulded or ‘ nipped ’ over them .
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