Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] out from the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And for those determined enough to stand out from the crowd by virtue of understatement , that may well be enough .
2 He had almost resigned himself to the fact that this cop was too cautious to be caught out like the one he had almost jumped five nights previously , when without warning the man below stepped out from the shelter of the deep doorway .
3 Actually I find it easier to put in the mortgage details which is page li er pa line three and any outstanding bills and loans and then basically find out from the person how much they need on top of that
4 After a minute or two the Asian suddenly slid out from the side of the big curtains and then stopped , a tray of drinks and ice creams round his neck .
5 ‘ From what I can remember this lunatic just accelerated out from the side of the road .
6 To Sulentic 's surprise , he has also found that the connection can be traced right into the central nucleus of NGC 43 19 — very much as we might expect if , as Arp has often suggested , high redshift objects are somehow shot out from the centres of otherwise normal galaxies .
7 So we dashed back to the steamer which was just pulling out from the bank — you two were jolly glad to see us .
8 ‘ She just shone out from the rest , ’ he says .
9 ‘ Now I just draw out from the bank a spending allowance for the week — to pay mum back , to cover essentials and for a few little extras .
10 The two most populous countries in the world , China and India , in the low-income economies group , were also separated out from the rest of this group for averaging purposes ; as were oil exporters and oil importers in the middle-income economies group .
11 The exceptions , which have some form of developed street network , a more diverse range of buildings and perhaps even a central core , clearly stand out from the pack on current evidence , and they can thus be seen to compare most favourably with the urban patterns recognizable within the major towns and cities of the province .
12 This theatre , which is in good condition , is partly hollowed out from the hillside and partly constructed .
13 The companies found this a major block to their activities and eventually pulled out from the area : ‘ The companies never officially admitted that they were leaving , just sort of let their prospecting licences lapse … the reason they departed was because they could n't see any way that they could effectively operate with such total opposition .
14 ‘ We are going through the process of making forensic tests and taking statements , which may take some time , and the inquiry is now mushrooming out from the house . ’
15 ‘ The mortgage market in the UK is a very mature one , ’ reflects Hendrik Vos , Marketing Manager , ‘ therefore you have to things exceptionally well to stand out from the crowd . ’
16 Imagine that a series of pebbles is being dropped in quick succession into the middle of a pond , so that waves are continuously radiating out from the middle .
17 The effect on our own accounts is that we now show all the mainstream activities of the Council together , and they are then separated out from the entries for all the other funds , appeals , and trust funds and so on .
18 Three ice islands recently broken out from the Ronne-Filchner ice shelf , in the southeast corner of the Weddell Sea , in area totalled 11.5 thousand km 2 and in thickness some 500 m ( Ferrigno and Gould , 1987 ) ; a single one almost 160km long with an area of over 6200km 2 , released from the Ross Ice Shelf in 1987 , was estimated to contain enough water to last the State of California over 600 years ( Polar Record , 1988 ) .
19 A samurai was publicly marked out from the rest of society by his appearance and his bearing of two swords .
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