Example sentences of "[coord] out [prep] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | either that or out on the bleeding street |
2 | There are two options , inside , or out on the open deck . |
3 | But the underlying idea of being at a loose end , or out of the practical swim , is a different matter altogether . |
4 | During the next few days I lived in terror , doors locked , ready to fly — to leave through the front door if Aunt Louise came to the back , or out of the back door if I saw her coming down the path . |
5 | The management of the economy through fiscal policy is assisted by the multiplier which magnifies any injection of expenditures or leakages of income into or out of the circular flow . |
6 | Twenty years back he must have been the most exciting man any girl could hope to meet , in or out of the British Army . |
7 | Stored and forgotten , or out in the deep desert beyond ? |
8 | He has recovered his form superbly after a broken finger threatened his career last season , and England boss Graham Taylor said : ‘ Sometimes when you 're with a Second Division club or out in the far North East you can feel forgotten . |
9 | I mean it 's going in and out at the right places but it 's also to do with childbearing O K. So George is changing the subject there completely kind of off the wall is n't he , er this comment ? |
10 | ‘ They 'll come down the servants ’ stairs and out at the back door . |
11 | There were hoof-marks of horses , and once or twice the slots of deer , and out on the very edge where the track was worst a narrow winding verge where travellers on foot had been forced to push their way through the undergrowth . |
12 | It was a long and tiring journey across country and out to the remote airfield , and a wasted one it seemed . |
13 | But what have we here as plays the ball across , it comes back off and out to the left hand side where the urgency from the crowd is for to get rid of it . |
14 | Thread cord up through rings and corresponding screw-eyes and out to the operational side . |
15 | Into our uniform and out to the main post . |
16 | After that Athelstan gave Tab and his two apprentices some pennies to take the coffin from the church and out to the old cemetery . |
17 | They are well preserved and maintained and the rampart walks are accessible , giving interesting views into the town and out over the surrounding countryside . |
18 | Down the twisting stone stairs again and out through the front door opposite the barber-shop where the barbers used to look so longingly at our flowing locks — later on , the regulation hair-style for most young men . |
19 | Even in the Regal Arms they were liable to think it unusual if anybody carried a body or a badly wounded man down the stairs and out through the front door . |
20 | Five minutes later , without giving herself time to think , be disappointed that she probably would n't see him again after today , she ran lightly down the stairs and out through the front door . |
21 | He flung himself down the marble stairs , and out through the front doors of the school . |
22 | ‘ He swirled his black necromancer 's cloak about her , and he carried her from the Sun Chamber and out through the great doors , and out into the night and none could stop him . |
23 | Then by common consent we crab-walked through the foyer and out through the main doors , like kids escaping from double Greek which , in a way , we were . |
24 | She could imagine it clanging across the hall , up the stairway , along the draughty corridors , around the drawing-room and out through the open windows . |
25 | A cloud of cigarette smoke hangs over the group , slowly wafting over the television set and out through the open window . |
26 | Anyway , he sees this fat cunt with some of his mates with some tea — and he 's moved along a bit to the end and he 's pissing down and out through the open bit and its all blowing down on these cunts ’ heads and into their |
27 | ‘ Melin ’ is Welsh for ‘ mill ’ , and the Meloch was the river which ran through the property , from which the diversion from the weir through the millpond , under the road and out into the famous River Dee would supply our needs . |
28 | Flanked by the two men , they walked down a wide marble staircase , and out into the brilliant sunshine . |
29 | He shook his head in wonder , and walked down the stairs to the hall , and out into the bright morning sunlight . |
30 | But , turning obediently , she led the way down the stairs and out into the bright heat of the day . |