Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] out [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 As Herman explains , ‘ [ c ] ollective action may result from structural ties between firms that integrate their interest and facilitate coordination between them — such as a common ownership interest — or it may arise out of a recognized common interest or mutual business interdependence with minimal personal contact and communications among the companies and their officials .
2 If it lived up to its name , she thought , it should stick out like a sore thumb among the warm , yellowish stone of the other buildings .
3 The second type of mutation is at Phe65 , the side chain that must rotate out of a hydrophobic pocket in the apoprotein to allow SAM to bind .
4 However , the recommendation that some regional colleges and colleges of education should become universities was not implemented , nor was the proposal that the colleges of education should move out of the public sector to become closely associated with the universities .
5 You must go out on a starry night and walk about for half an hour trying to see the sky in terms of the old ( Ptolemaic ) cosmology .
6 The dealer would also imply that the client should come out of the new Rolls Royce issue immediately .
7 That is one more reason why , across the south , there has been a greater swing to Labour than in any other region and why , I must point out to the hon. Member for Thurrock ( Mr. Janman ) , who seeks to speak for my native county , we look forward to a smashing victory in his constituency at the next election .
8 He told the Governor that ‘ Rance must come out with a new policy , with proposals that go beyond the White paper [ of May 1945 ] .
9 They should get out into the real world .
10 The CBI now confirms that the UK should pull out of the present recession at the beginning of 1992 ; in fact , will it ?
11 If you are already physically active , then you should start out with a brisk , vigorous walk for 20 minutes , stretching yourself as you walk .
12 He says the Government should help out with the extra cost .
13 His country still insist he must turn out in an African Nations Cup qualifier against South Africa rather than the televised curtain-raiser at the City ground .
14 These tournaments were also not being played on clay , and she obviously felt that participation in the Olympics would damage her chances on the tournament circuit , where failure to defend her points would mean that she might drop out of the top 100 in world rankings .
15 If a mass of hot and a mass of cold gas were brought together , then it was very highly improbable that they would not mix and give a uniformly warm mixture ; but there was a small probability , and Maxwell imagined a demon who might assist the process , that the warm gas might separate out into a hot and a cold portion , in defiance of the Second Law .
16 As a very rough indicator , instalments totalling over one-tenth of income might stand out as a heavy current credit commitment .
17 The opportunity for a negotiated peace had been lost — and with it the hope that anything good might come out of the Great War .
18 I had thought I might stroll out towards the famous Liseberg Gardens , but I got no more than a couple of hundred yards before I was turned back by the pitiless downpour .
19 If I if I do n't know the answer I 'll find out in the interim period and let you know at the end of the session .
20 So it was ‘ all change ’ on Pig Street : Solomon Mead replaced Elizabeth Titford in the little dwelling house which had served the Titford family so well over the years , and Thomas Tuck began to see what kind of commercial success he could make out of the vacated butcher and chandler 's shop next door .
21 The figure in the seat was human , as far as he could make out in the murky light , but there was something about the awkward way it was sprawled in the chair that made him glad he could n't see it any clearer .
22 Dexter pressed his nose against the grid of cold metal but all he could make out in the shadowy interior was a counter and the shimmer of clothes hung up in plastic bags .
23 He 'd speak out for a poor helpless old man like Donny , just as he did for Ireland . ’
24 Several times in the next few months I went up to the top floor again , where I could look out of the high windows in the roof to see the surrounding countryside and be alone with my thoughts .
25 It was a worry when we did n't get a pension and when it did come , it alleviated things , but we know it could run out in the New Year .
26 From this room she could see out through a wide window into a dense stand of woodland , which seemed to crowd together , not quite hiding a track leading to a small cave .
27 The window was barred although it was possible to reach through and open the casement He preferred to sit there because in better weather he could see out into the Inner Ward and the White Tower .
28 When puppies for research were raised in isolation in laboratory , it was noticed that the ill-effects of such rearing could be somewhat offset by cutting a window into the side of their box so that they could see out into the busy laboratory .
29 You could splash out on a kingsize Strata waterbed costing around £2,800 .
30 Heston 's the only man who could drop out of a cubic moon — he 's so square [ very hip talk for 1964 ! ] .
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