Example sentences of "[to-vb] [noun] [adv prt] of the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 All her creditors were asked to execute the Debt of Trust , and agree to accept payment out of the Trust Estate .
2 £4bn to pull Industry out of the doldrums
3 Clinton has vowed to assist the beleaguered Boris Yeltsin as he struggles to pull Russia out of the mire caused by decades of hardline Communist rule .
4 But the men in white arrived and began to pull Karen out of the room .
5 ‘ Labour and the Liberal Democrats want to pull Scotland out of the mainstream of the United Kingdom .
6 National training in basic interviewing skills to be given to all police officers — this recognises the central role that confessions play in the police investigative strategy and the need to train officers out of the use of the ‘ persuasive techniques ’ , witnessed by the Commission 's researchers , which run the risk of producing unreliable evidence , in favour of a more open minded and even handed approach .
7 A recent report from the EOC found that ‘ overall the Youth Training Programme does little or nothing to widen girls ’ horizons or to provide ways out of the low-paid and dead-end jobs which are a feature of many women 's lives in Northern Ireland today ’ .
8 TYCOON Richard Branson told yesterday how he would run the country — after a poll showed he was tops to pull Britain out of the slump .
9 Some kind soul had forsaken the drama to escort Sandra out of the room and comfort her .
10 Through these policies it was also hoped to pull women out of the work-place , by glorifying the role of nurturing , family women to reduce unemployment .
11 Jean Harlow , alias the teenager Harlean Carpenter from Kansas City , was doing all she could to pull Hollywood out of the slump but in general the more respectable critics were more prepared at this time to hand the plaudits to the male actors , who were seen very much as the cutting edge of the new realism .
12 Most dealers , however anticipated something of the kind might happen once they were forbidden to sell clients out of the stock .
13 Tracy Kidder 's The Soul of a New Machine , Joe McGinniss ' earlier The Selling of the President combined ‘ new journalism ’ ( meticulous , participatory , eyewitness reporting ) with an acute business eye to create best-sellers out of the development of a computer and Richard Nixon 's use of advertising to get himself elected President .
14 As the man who had emerged to lead France out of the abyss of June 1940 , he could hardly countenance a return to the errors that had brought about the débcle .
15 Accordingly leave to serve Lies out of the jurisdiction could not be justified by Cargolux under article 39 CMR paragraph 2 and Order 11 of the Rules of the Supreme Court .
16 The rolling forest of Wensleydale that surrounded Bainbridge has gone now , with its deer and wild boar , but the horn that was blown at dusk every evening between Holyrood and Shrovetide to lead travellers out of the forest to safety still hangs behind the bar of the Rose and Crown , although it is blown now only at village weddings .
17 The questions which arose turned on the construction of the then rules concerning leave to serve proceedings out of the jurisdiction : Rousou 's Trustee v. Rousou [ 1955 ] 1 W.L.R. 545 and , later , [ 1955 ] 3 All E.R.
18 She used to attack the audience — during the hugely-successful New York run of Without You I 'm Nothing , she would use a torch to pick faces out of the dark — and for a while incorporated messages left on her answering machine by a once hostile critic who was trying to suck up and make friends .
19 McLeish grunted , feeling meanly triumphant that he had turned out to be right in his view that Francesca would not be able to sweep Tristram out of the hands of the New York police in quite the Napoleonic way she had assumed .
20 They are successful and helpful devices to help people out of the isolation of unemployment .
21 ‘ I know what their intentions are , which are to enhance the individual 's life so that collectively we are all enhanced — to try to do stuff out of the mould of the old politics , which the three main parties are dealing with .
22 And the Gunners ' record signing , pilloried for his moment of madness in the battle of White Hart Lane a week ago , said : ‘ People in the street are going to look at me as if I 'm some kind of nutcase trying to put people out of the game . ’
23 It must also put together a package which will help to ease Britain out of the recession .
24 But even the fiercest dissenter would have been pushed to leave McIlvanney out of the frame .
25 However , the huge site fees lodged by the casinos in Las Vegas would appear to put London out of the running .
26 Unisys Corp , ICL and DEC were all very happy to see Unix out of the hands of AT&T/NCR .
27 In an effort to keep weight out of the eyes of the yacht , the stemhead roller may be unshipped when not in use and stowed away further aft .
28 Six months later Acheson indicated that the United States wished to keep Taiwan out of the hands of mainland China .
29 Barlow said : ‘ It is up to me to keep Neil out of the side and prove the manager wrong .
30 Many computer-aided machines have locks to keep workers out of the innards .
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