Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] out to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In another account of youth work , Hubert Secretan rehearsed the same complaint : ‘ Every boy 's sympathy goes out to the lithe and resourceful crook …
2 Dancing space was at a premium as hit after hit poured out to the appreciative crowd .
3 ‘ You will not lose by this , Yin Tsu , ’ he said softly , his heart going out to the old man .
4 No need to dash out to the Chinese takeaway — if you keep an Oriental corner of the cupboard you can create your own instant stir- fries .
5 That challenge forced Mr Clinton into another change of emphasis , mainly concerned with the need to reach out to the private sector and to reduce the federal budget deficit .
6 The terrace of the dining room leads out to the freshwater swimming pool and there is a pizzeria and bar on the beach .
7 Now , when the farmer had left the house , his wife went out to the stable and saddled the pony. then she put on her husband 's best clothes , tied the turban high so as to look as tall as possible , jumped astride the pony , and set off to the field where the tiger was waiting .
8 The magnetron , as it then existed , was a hollow copper block pumped out to a high vacuum , through which ran a heated wire .
9 Louisa received it so , and her heart went out to the suffering woman .
10 But the rabbi was a very kind man and his heart went out to the poor man .
11 Charity felt her heart go out to the other woman .
12 Thérèse called out to the wooden spoon clotted with Dijon mustard .
13 It is a hole dug out to a sufficient size to accommodate a sea kale forcing pot .
14 In another letter read out to the Zoological Society in his absence , but which was written on 10 May 1839 , he recalls :
15 Only Chelsea 's £105,000 bill in 1991 for payments to former captain Graham Roberts tops the penalty dished out to the Third Division promotion-chasers yesterday .
16 Giger was asked to produce designs not only for the full-grown monster , especially its head , but also for the two earlier stages , the ‘ face-hugger ’ ( the piece that comes out of the egg to attach itself to an animal/human and force an embryo down their throat ) and the ‘ chest-burster ’ ( the small creature that has grown enough within the host to burst out to an independent existence , killing the host in the process ) .
17 Her shape descended and she settled herself beside me , in awkward abundance , and my hand reached out to the white pulp of her shoulder .
18 The ruling couple preferred , however , to receive RFE 's news at second hand from a minion , who all too often had the thankless task of retailing the unflattering commentary or the contents of a critical letter smuggled out to the Munich-based radio station by one of their subjects .
19 IN THE FADING sepia postcards on sale in the antiquarian shop in Makhoul Street , General Henri Gouraud appears as a stiff little figure in a dark kepi , his right hand held out to a British officer .
20 At the greatest of the Roman baths , like those of Caracalla , a large central concourse led out to the various facilities .
21 The battered husband returns to be told and " " reconforté " " , " comforted " , by the tale of the treatment meted out to the would-be seducer .
22 The aim is to loan more of the local history objects out to the local community .
23 ‘ in the wreck of human affairs , indeed , God often makes His truth appear ; and causes His Gospel , like a plank thrown out to the perishing mariner , to be properly known and prized . ’
24 Although I feel that one theme in To Kill A Mocking Bird is racial prejudice , I feel that this idea broadens out to the main theme for the whole novel of man 's inhumanity to man .
25 The most common type of star in the Galaxy turns out to the humble red dwarf .
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