Example sentences of "[vb pp] out [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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31 I think she 's probably just come out for a quick stroll , we wo n't spend our time over that at the moment , hello
32 Forest , held to a 1-1 draw at the City Ground , were 3-1 ahead with 17 minutes of normal time left , and deservedly so ; they had come out for the second half bristling with determination to make quality tell .
33 The gifts of the Spirit come out of a living relationship with the Father .
34 It has n't come out of a first aid .
35 The staff were also worried about his speech , not seeming to take into account the fact that this was the first time he had come out of a Punjabi-speaking environment and was having to cope with new experiences in a foreign language .
36 Whilst they had been watching the protesters , a waitress had come out of The Crossed Keys hotel on the corner of the square carrying a tray of interesting-looking glasses .
37 The empiricism that had come out of the 19th century as the dominant intellectual mode had been twisted to the right , so to speak , by the ‘ white emigration ’ from Europe .
38 Well , all the types listed above have come out of the Soviet Union recently .
39 To heighten concern about the Convention , Broken Promise could not have come out at a better time .
40 so of course that would 've come out at a later stage , yeah , you know there 's a lot of business miles involved in flying to all these er places .
41 Their union has not only survived the rigours of a decade , but has come out at the other end stronger than ever .
42 If it had come out at the same time , it would have been submerged , and if it had come out afterwards it would have been seen as merely reactive .
43 The governing body of English basketball has come out against a top woman player who wants to compete with men .
44 From the time of James 's second Indulgence , most Whigs and Nonconformists had come out against the suspending power , on the promise that if they stuck by the Church , they would be given some measure of toleration .
45 Though I suppose one has to make a passing one has to make a passing er reference to the information which has come out in the other house erm and be publicised this weekend in the press but er er at one million almost one million a slug , M E Ps do n't come cheap , er I suppose one however would want to make allowances for the fact that they have three parliamentary buildings , that they have to go on trips and that er they have to pay er er I suppose German rates for their bureaucracy so there clearly are exceptional factors and indeed I would n't want to make too much of that .
46 Stressing that members " who have come out in the open face a serious risk of arrest and detention " , Aford urged the international community " to sustain diplomatic and moral pressure on the Malawian government to respect human rights " .
47 Rather we are looking at those beliefs , supported by significant power bases within each bloc , which have won out in the political process in the past seventy years and still appear to be doing so , in some cases with much decreased vitality .
48 ‘ A few notes spaced out like the first stars that penetrate the sky at sunset ’ , as Tovey describes the miraculous midway section .
49 Not so many spectators had trudged out to the furthest holes along the seashore .
50 Growing tips of tomato plants should be pinched out above the top truss
51 That , if need be , could be sorted out at a later date .
52 It is high time the variable quality of international referees and the anomalies that abound in interpretation were sorted out by an International Board Survey .
53 The magistrates said the issue of compensation could be sorted out in the civil courts .
54 Construction could be caried out as a joint venture with the new state-owned company set up to operate all existing nuclear plant .
55 It is often ‘ security considerations ’ — fears about security and control — which exacerbate the physical conditions of prisoners ; for example , they may be left for 23 hours a day in their cells because they are not trusted to be let out without a high degree of staff-intensive supervision .
56 The massive £45-million building was planned when property prices in London seemed set to rise forever , but the scheme was still dependent on the top five floors being let out for an annual £6 million .
57 The Great Hall is let out on a daily rate to companies such as Deutsche Grammophon and EMI for classical music recordings .
58 First , on the rateable value of the property , which was a value based on an assessment of what the property could earn if it were let out on the open market .
59 ‘ They are let out of a greyhound-style trap and can cover more than 100 metres in a matter of seconds when they get a whiff of food , ’ says Michael , 52 .
60 There is now light at the end of the runnel as the contracts are let out in the final stage this month .
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