Example sentences of "[noun sg] [to-vb] [pron] out [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ It 's an awful thing to say , but the revenue to pull us out of this recession has to come from somewhere , ’ she said .
2 ‘ It 's an awful thing to say , but the revenue to pull us out of this recession has to come from somewhere , ’ she said .
3 He pointed to the university 's successful three-year programme to steer it out of serious financial problems without compulsory redundancies .
4 Her children have disappointed and saddened her to the point where she has made the decision to rule them out of future considerations surrounding the throne .
5 The North of England has the capacity to pull itself out of such a mire , and surely wants the chance to exert its muscle to do so .
6 He was hauled back to New York and given that column to keep him out of any more mischief . ’
7 Barry might well be back any second to get me out of this . ’
8 Their tasks included collecting taxes and when necessary producing labourers for public works on dams , canals or bridges ; and enlisting the required numbers of men for the army who lacked the money to buy themselves out of national service .
9 So it was off to the department stores of central London with a LASMO cheque to kit himself out with warm and waterproof clothes as a matter of some urgency .
10 He had laid by his sword , but he had a dagger still upon him , and managed to draw it and slash through the folds that smothered him ; and Norbury and Erpyngham and half a dozen others of his own people came plunging and splashing through the storm to help him out of these ominous grave-clothes .
11 From there he was handed on to Bloomsbury House , where Elaine Blond agreed a one-off payment to fit him out for another job .
12 In the thirtieth minute , Gary Weaving scored what looked like a perfectly good goal , only for the linesman to rule it out for offside , to everyone 's dismay .
13 ‘ Goddess of poetry , healing and smithcraft , if she takes you that way ; and if not , enough saints of the name to see you out of any small predicament .
14 We had studied some navigation but now had the chance to try it out in more detail .
15 He struggled on and , with less than 50 per cent of his sight restored , took this year 's annual meeting of the NCC without betraying his difficulties except when he said when taking questions : ‘ I will ask my deputy to point you out for obvious reasons . ’
16 Only seven of the fifteen large bookstores in Moscow took the trouble to send anything out to provincial peasant reading-centres .
17 It coincided with the Suez Canal Crisis and Nasser 's decision to kick us out in 1956 .
18 He 's got a bad knee and without the union to keep him out of hard physical work he 's stuck really — he 's got no qualifications or anything . ’
19 Having defined interest groups in this way , it was customary for early students of the interest group world to sort it out into those groups that were promoting a " cause " or an issue , and those groups that were active in trying to advance the immediate material and " sectional " interests of their own members .
20 His voice grated , but he spoke out clearly , perhaps even a little louder than was natural because it cost him such an effort to get it out at all .
21 It has no right to be there and if you will take my advice you will tell Frank Coven to take it out of that window and back to the bank as fast as he can . ’
22 I want you and the company to find some way to get me out of this mess I 've been landed in .
23 Also , the goons will hardly have had time to make anything out of those bits of wood by then .
  Next page