Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] out [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 She looks out over the back gardens of John 's quiet neighbours .
2 So we get two things , we get a very good new personality , and secondly , an intelligent personality , and , therefore , and this is an important part of the strategy , she gets out of the other archaeologists she 's talking to a much higher level of interaction and intellectual interchange than she would if she were simply a standard presenter .
3 Hailed as the next Sophia Loren , the dark-eyed Italian is set to take the fashion world by storm as she steps out in the latest clothes by rainwear company Four Seasons .
4 He points out in the British Journal of Educational Psychology that the results of these schemes have been disappointing and it is doubtful whether they have any permanent effect on intelligence .
5 Troia Cathedral , begun in 1093 , is built high up in the small hill town and is visible for miles as it stands out of the surrounding flat plain .
6 If he hits one then he bounds about inside the unit , bouncing from foe to foe , until he spins out of the other side , leaving the enemy completely devastated .
7 The only area in which it loses out to the deeper-bodied F-model is on sheer projection , and I could well imagine some players foregoing that extra bit of welly just for the comfort and convenience of the LSE 's thin body .
8 Since the condition for rationality contained in restriction ( 7.3 ) rules out any systematic relation between v t , the prediction error , and lagged values of v t , it rules out by the same token any persistent deviation of y t from y * ; .
9 ‘ We now have this ludicrous situation where if a fire broke out in one end of a particular street in Prestatyn , Rhyl fire engines will go to it and if it breaks out in the other end of the street Prestatyn will go to it , ’ added Coun Edwards .
10 ‘ For example , the beautiful Nocturne at the end of Act 1 only makes it impression if it emerges out of the preceding dialogue , which gradually bridges the mood from Bénédict 's very energetic aria to the reflective conversation between two women .
11 creating a polymer film at the air-tear interface which supports or drags a layer of water along with it as it spreads out over the ocular surface with each blink .
12 Van Gennep 's ideas on ‘ rites of separation ’ ( 1960 ) are a useful means of interpreting the social and spatial movements undertaken by the ethnographer as policeman , as he moves out from the early uniformed position of centrality described above .
13 Now he sets out on the second stage of the journey , with Sarai , his childless wife , and his nephew Lot .
14 He is a great example to anyone who has a setback and it is marvellous to hear how he has put adversity behind him as he sets out on the long slog round the tough pro circuit once again .
15 The Scot will be in good company when he sets out with the early starters among the 70 survivors today .
16 That was that really … open flood gates … goal 2 … ball over the top for Wallace who went from 25 yds into the right of te area and finished absolutely brilliantly … goal 3 corner from right Strachan talking to the kop asking where to place it … hits it long … comes back to him he hits it it bobbles out to the left edge of the area where Speed hits it along the ground .
17 er , and with the hour 's difference I think it works out about the same
18 They have this little peephole where you have to shove your cigarette so it sticks out on the other side for them to light it .
19 When that aim is interpreted , or at least when it comes out of the other end of the machine , it results in the odd ex-chief executive being appointed .
20 It does n't matter , it comes out to the same thing .
21 They 've brought it forward a little , so that it comes out in the last week of April — after the newspaper pieces .
22 ‘ But he comes out at the right time and he stays on his line at the right time .
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