Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv prt] of the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Every now and then I can see it all so clearly ; a nice log fire and a little round table with a tablecloth , and hot toast with great slabs of butter , and crumpets with honey all oozing out of the little holes , and a china cup with steaming tea — ’ |
2 | Tory asked suddenly , pointing down to a strand of granite pebbles by which a group of bright blooms apparently sprouted out of the shallow water . |
3 | The kitten lived to be nine , so came out of the whole business best , I suppose . |
4 | Tony Tucker , Tony Tubbs , James Smith and Trevor Berbick have all tumbled out of the top 10 and Biggs is now ranked 27th . |
5 | Across the road a large grey car suddenly pulled out of the Downshurst-bound traffic and stopped on the grass verge beyond the estate-car and the police busy with tape-measures and notebooks . |
6 | Then , on 8 May , the Secretary of State suddenly announced out of the blue that the advertising of that post was to be put on ice . |
7 | A man had suddenly emerged out of the blinding iridescence of the mist , a vague figure standing in the middle of the road with his back towards us . |
8 | The probability is low for it to move a long distance at more than the speed of light , but it can go faster than light for just far enough to get out of the black hole , and then go slower than light . |
9 | 1838 " A Motion was made , seconded , and carried , that the Receiving houses and Post Runners hitherto paid out of the General Meeting Assessment should in future be discontinued . " |
10 | Doyle was just climbing out of the shattered window of the junk shop . |
11 | ‘ It is largely made up of the petty squabbles of shop-keepers and the airy superiority of the ironmasters . ’ |
12 | He added : ‘ The picture of politics which survives , however , is completely different , and is largely made up of the petty squabbles of shopkeepers and the airy superiority of the ironmasters . ’ |
13 | In addition , a prominent counter-melody is introduced ( itself largely made up of the small cell of our example ) . |
14 | And yesterday the International Cricket Council astonishingly copped out of the whole issue . |
15 | Then , turning away to look out of the small , square window he delivered the cruellest cut of all : " Specially when she 's second best . " |
16 | The right-hand page lay still , and in the spine a few white petals lay , and a single hard bud of blackthorn , the white blossom just breaking out of the dark husk . |
17 | GRAEME SOUNESS had no complaints after watching Liverpool easily dumped out of the European Cup Winners Cup by Russian champions Spartak Moscow . |
18 | At Leamington , in May 1920 , the coalitionists were finally driven out of the Liberal party . |
19 | I stood for a long time in a telephone box just to keep out of the slicing rain . |
20 | And can the virtue that thus went out of the spiritual reality called England ever be restored ? |
21 | I just dreamed out of the blue that she had died , and then she did die . |
22 | But she could n't just walk out of the old woman 's life , not without preparing her first . |
23 | Amongst other escapes , a common criminal , Wesley Scroggs who is supposed to have just slung a rope over the battlements to get away and another prisoner who just ran out of the main door into the street . |
24 | One of the soldiers wanted to know if it was true that Medoc was preparing for the birth into the world of the monster god-idol , Crom Croich , and an argument sprang up as to whether Medoc and Crom Croich were the most evil and most powerful forces ever to come out of the Dark Ireland , or whether the Erl-King had been worse . |
25 | If the girl avoids becoming trapped , through an unwanted pregnancy , into an unsatisfactory lifestyle with an unsupportive or absent marital partner , she may still break out of the adverse chain of events . |
26 | And another part was still looking out of the rear window of the taxi at the green hills receding behind the tiled roofs into the morning sunshine ; still standing in the corridor of the train as the flat terrain of southern England slid past and a great weight built up steadily in my chest . |
27 | Grindingly backward , it 's hardly moved out of the 19th century . |
28 | If we ever climb out of the current recession , the skills shortage in the industry will be a major problem . |
29 | Fire , which painfully heals and floridly creates out of the slimiest reek and chaos … |
30 | Elsewhere the sources are precariously reconstructed out of the edited work itself . |