Example sentences of "[vb infin] out [prep] the [noun] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 we might see boats fall out of the sky too .
2 The tawny owl sample contains a lot of murids compared with other owls , and for this species the percentage molar loss is unexpectedly low because the murid teeth do not fall out of the maxilla so easily .
3 But you can not simply opt out of the issue altogether , no matter who you are : whatever choice you make in this area will have a meaning and give a signal .
4 The meat she would dry out in the sun tomorrow .
5 We saw him look out of the window once or twice . ’
6 As we work , we can look out of the window now and then and see the students doing physical exercises and practising sports for the sports day on Monday — they 're very keen on physical jerks here , and at Peking we used to be woken up at 7 a.m. to find the Chinese staff doing P.E .
7 A Scarborough fishing boat will sail out of the harbour tomorrow after major restoration work which followed a collision at sea .
8 The orchestra did not miss out on the fun either , starting with an unscored game of hunt-the-missing-French-horn-part ( eventually found lurking on the bassoonist 's stand ) , which delayed the start .
9 They did n't move out of the area necessarily .
10 Suddenly the flood-gates opened and Topaz let everything spill out from the day when she took Andrew 's horse to the moment when Amsterdam asked her to marry him .
11 I 'll give you a room to work in , I 'll turn round and walk the other way whenever I see you , and I 'll stay out of the kitchen whenever you want to use it .
12 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 :
13 Prospective players need n't rush out to the gym though .
14 When Henry V died in Normandy in 1422 mos teutonicus was employed , as it was thought that conventional embalming would not hold out for the journey back to England .
15 But on the other hand she could n't stand out in the corridor indefinitely .
16 I do n't even go out on the street now unless she comes with me .
17 They saw it go out of the valley down towards Keswick .
18 Do , do you go out to the pub much yourself ?
19 He found that he could n't go out with the lads anymore , and he felt he 'd lost his happy-go-lucky side .
20 ‘ I think — I 'm almost sure I will live , if we can go out in the garden together sometimes .
21 If we work at that and strive for extra quality and performance , we can come out of the recession pretty good shape .
22 What rate does it come out of the end here ?
23 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 .
24 And of course we 're offering a service of allowing people to choose to come at four rather than six and we are making ourselves accessible to single mothers who perhaps ca n't come out in the evening etcetera .
25 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 " ;
26 Devlin said , ‘ I suppose that thing makes people get out of the way fast ? ’
27 ‘ This time the lights turned green but I did n't get out of the way sharp enough . ’
28 I 'll take him back to Strelsau and you must get out of the country as fast as you can . ’
29 We did n't get out of the cells very often .
30 She knew she must get out of the car quickly , or it would get stuck behind the steering wheel .
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