Example sentences of "[v-ing] out [prep] [adj] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If he had been walking out with any other girl in service in the town they could have stayed in on a wet night and talked by the kitchen range , but with the Hogans hovering around he had to bring Patsy out into the rain .
2 We almost convince ourselves that the music is created not by the orchestra but by the tip of the baton itself , rich sounds oozing out like some exotic genie .
3 Snapping out of this disagreeable mood will release tensions in everyone .
4 As Kaurismaki 's associate Mikko Piela describes it with equally characteristic , and refreshingly literate , hyperbole : ‘ THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL evokes such feelings of sorrow , pity and horror that the dusty bones of Aristotle himself must be clattering out of sheer cathartic pleasure .
5 For the first time I can imagine some dim trail of obsession , some weird recursive delusion , leading out of this little room , down the spiral stairs , and out to some wildly mischosen destination …
6 ‘ It 's a new situation that we have got to handle and , somehow , we have got to find a way of breaking out of this low growth , and trying to find a way of getting our economy going again .
7 The elegiac note sounded ominously , unanswerably , offering calm and collusion : as if aware of the risks , Charles struck suddenly out , moving out into dangerous white water , tipping over the edge into a new reach .
8 Several other countries have either scaled down their original expansion plans for nuclear power , delayed the continuation of their nuclear power expansion or begun to look seriously at the phasing out of existing nuclear power stations .
9 I think it 's time I did something about getting out of this damnable situation . ’
10 Over her eleven year premiership the only substantial issue of penal policy in which Mrs Thatcher played a decisive part was the privatization of prisons and remand centres , and the contracting out of certain criminal justice services .
11 That was the time when I stood in all that fluid with my boots on , a priceless carpet under my feet , hounds never seen on the earth before lying still and obedient before me , staring out of that maternal portico with its flanking columns , down the long avenue of limes that lead to birth , life and Arcadia .
12 Oh I 'm gon na start going , I have n't been swimming for that long and I 've been saying off and on oh I must go , I must go , but when it 's so cold outside you do n't feel like coming out with all wet hair and all that
13 It 's , I mean they 're , okay you 're applying from three different standpoints but it 's coming out of one well budgetholder 's erm kitty .
14 They were amazed at this big , big voice coming out of this tiny girl . ’
15 The country is coming out of this difficult recession and moving into a more stable situation .
16 It was n't coming out in any special order , though Pascoe suspected that something was being saved until the end .
17 You 're not walking , not about widespread privatisation , but creeping privatisation and you 're now talking about not opting out of the National Health Service but you 're now talking about opting out of local national Health Service control .
18 It occurs in a book called The Scots Week-end , published by the Carswells in the late 1930s , and crying out for some other publisher to take it up and put it on the market , where it would be grabbed by many eager Scots .
19 He staggered through the open doorway , into the painted freezer , feeling his knees giving out with each inept step .
20 If numbers of rabbits are sitting out within this rough ground they can be totally enclosed if sufficient nets are available .
21 To cover all work undertaken by solicitors arising out of any alleged act of negligence and/or breach of statutory duty as a result of which the victim has sustained personal injuries or fatal injuries .
22 Family property owning patterns are affected by widespread home ownership , so it is not impossible that in addition to ordinary feelings of affection , concern and duty , some carers may be under pressure to care , to save family wealth seeping out in expensive residential care fees .
23 He is resigned to missing out on any serious rugby during this month , but by early October he should know what the season holds for him .
24 The study of evolution is the study of history , not of the working out of some mathematical programme of progress towards complexity or a Teilhardian urge to evolutionary perfection .
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