Example sentences of "[noun pl] and [noun] [verb] [adv prt] of " in BNC.
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1 | Any junkie or Bowery red-eye comes limping down the street , then five sombre fatboys with baseball bats and axe-handles stride out of the nearest trattoria . |
2 | Some twigs and leaves fell out of the folds . |
3 | A tankard on the compartment table sits as a reminder of the glories of Soviet technology — sputniks and rockets spin out of a world inhabited by the Spassky Tower and an olive branch — and , as if to demonstrate that the mundane is as attainable as the sublime , not a spoon rattles , not a single drop of sweet Georgian tea is spilt , as the carriage is smoothly elevated and the task of fitting a Chinese-gauge undercarriage is taken in hand . |
4 | I am sure the warm affinities between Scots and Jews arise out of appreciation of herrings . |
5 | One may think of an army brigade as being composed of battalions , battalions made up of companies and companies made up of platoons . |
6 | Because the dots in the print-head of the dot-matrix printer can be addressed individually , lines and curves made up of single dots can be drawn . |
7 | Dhani and Caretaker came out of the Cathedral , emerging on to gravel and looked right . |
8 | They file into the office and sit round the long oak table , slightly in awe of Vic , serious men in chain-store suits , with pens and pencils sticking out of their breast pockets . |
9 | It is obviously highly desirable that middle-class youngsters and students drop out of smoking — even in this country , they do so in relatively high numbers — but that concentrates with an even stronger focus the efforts of the tobacco and advertising industries on youngsters who do not come from such categories . |
10 | In the garden scenes , the technique gives a tangible impression of organic growth , of nature recycling itself , now buds and shoots evolving out of the rotting vegetation of last year 's earthly fruits . |
11 | And would the paper , edited by the man who had the crotches and armpits cut out of his suits by Pamela Bordes , be featuring Mr Bell at all ? |
12 | The musical content of The Mysteries was provided by a group of musicians and singers made up of pupils and staff and even the school chaplain , Father Nick Kern on bass guitar . |
13 | People 's values and attitudes arise out of their material environment and daily experiences as much as out of what they hear or read . |
14 | The interesting feature is the variety of sub-topics and activities arising out of this one unit , offering to pupils a considerable element of choice as well as of imaginative " playing-out " . |
15 | It was like a mountain of walls and houses and streets rising out of the Vale with the river curling round its feet , lapping at the high walls . |
16 | With XPG4 , as part of its sworn intent to become more user-oriented , X/Open will be assembling various specific user packages and profiles made up of combinations of the existing and new XPG components . |
17 | COSTS AND EXPENSES ARISING OUT OF DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS |
18 | All of us wrote ; poems and stories poured out of us . |
19 | Over a period of time circuit boards and chips creep out of their sockets as different components cool and heat up at different rates . |
20 | Surveys of galaxies show large voids with virtually nothing in them , and filaments and walls made up of clusters and superclusters . |
21 | There could be whole antiworlds and antipeople made out of antiparticles . |
22 | Containment relieves anxiety about strong feelings and impulses getting out of control . |
23 | Other places might have the shame of illicit love affairs and babies born out of wedlock , but not theirs . |
24 | Black holes and craters appear out of nowhere and it can be hell at night and very dangerous . ’ |
25 | Having regard to the objectives and the general scheme of the Convention , that it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention for the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned . |
26 | Having regard to the objective and the general scheme of the Convention , it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention for the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned . |
27 | As the court held with respect to the expression ‘ matters relating to a contract ’ used in article 5(1) ( see the judgments of 22 March 1983 in Peters [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 , and of 8 March 1988 in Arcado [ 1988 ] E.C.R. 1539 ) , having regard to the objectives and general scheme of the Convention , it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention of the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned . |
28 | Order 17 , r 11 applies to any fixed date action ( and any default action ) except those listed in r 11(1) , which include actions for the recovery of land , rent actions and actions arising out of a regulated consumer credit agreement . |
29 | There were very few artefacts recovered from the settlement , even in areas protected from later ploughing ; they included shears , nails , a variety of fragmentary fittings and pottery made up of nine fabric groups . |
30 | This descendant of the model owes its features to comments and discussion arising out of an academic conference ( PALA 1990 , Amsterdam University ) . |