Example sentences of "out the whole [noun] " in BNC.

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1 When he checked the effects of the street lights , Dr Rydell found that , averaged out the whole year , there were about five times as many bats in the villages with street lights as in the dark areas of countryside and the one unlit village .
2 And , because of sponsorship , you do n't have to fork out the whole £60 yourself .
3 Working out the whole story will be a long , difficult process of unravelling the pathways of insulin action in cells .
4 Between them , they tumbled out the whole story , the peacocks , the stone lions , Evelyn 's mum , Mrs Grace , the notice going up about Hambury — everything .
5 And although I was fairly certain she had nothing to do with the shooting , if the police started asking questions her husband would find out the whole story anyway .
6 It did n't take long for Brown Owl to find out the whole story .
7 No-one should think twice about blurting out the whole story .
8 Folly 's enthusiasm took over and she found herself pouring out the whole story .
9 All you 've done is hold out the whole day against odds of ten to one .
10 But one day she asked if she could stay out the whole day , and away she went on her little pony , with her two dogs running behind .
11 Gentleman sees the working papers he will discover that no hospital will be able to ask for trust status unless it agrees to carry out the whole range of services that must be undertaken in that area .
12 A Home Secretary spends many hours conscientiously reading background papers which set out the whole history of a single police officer 's alleged offences , sometimes in a bundle of papers an inch thick , in order that justice and equity may be done .
13 And er it was lovely and we were enjoying it until I pulled out the whole chicken 's head .
14 In the UK the only practical , and politically acceptable , way of creating such ‘ wilderness areas , , would be by freehold purchase ( e.g. by NCC or NT ) involving buying out any existing tenancies or rights and by fencing out the whole unit .
15 In the UK the only practical , and politically acceptable , way of creating such ‘ wilderness areas ’ would be by freehold purchase ( e.g. by NCC or NT ) involving buying out any existing tenancies or rights and by fencing out the whole unit .
16 This fourth unit , edited as the third stanza , is , in fact , borrowed from a current Middle English verse paraphrase of lines in a Latin meditation and provides some justification for printing out the whole piece in stanza form .
17 Lewis said that the Government thought that it was only necessary , at present , to provide suitable accommodation for the War Office and the Foreign Office , but preliminary steps could be taken towards acquiring the land , and Hall could obtain designs for laying out the whole area .
18 " He envisages any show as a complete theatrical entity-staging , set design , choreography ; he 'll map out the whole show , then monitor it bar by bar — police it .
19 All of us were checking new bands out the whole time .
20 The test of " a right to stay " on the land is in both cases , " Did that person possess the land in fact , while intending to use the land and to keep out the whole world ? "
21 Even though we were always moving around , we 'd always be on the same tip ; we 'd go to bed at the same time and my mom would carry cooking pots into hotels and cook — stink out the whole place with curry .
22 So they w they came out of this working man 's club on top of this hill pulled out the whole thing and all the balls rolled out .
23 Look just packet of crisps you 'd give out the whole packet .
24 Its origins are disguised by its huge cob , and only in the last few years has genetic analysis teased out the whole truth about its humble cereal ancestry .
25 For Wyntoun broadened out the whole context of Scottish history , invoking the model of the fourth-century World Chronicle of Eusebius of Caesarea in order to set it , as John MacQueen has written , ‘ firmly within the framework of the Christian world-picture , and by so doing to demonstrate the links joining the Scottish monarchy and people to the overall providential scheme ’ .
26 It leaves out the whole class of voluntary obligations where no such change occurs , such as promises which are not relied upon , nor expected to be relied upon .
27 ‘ All the failsafes are power driven — if we do n't get out the whole section will depressurize ! ’
28 I sketch out the whole scenario in seven minutes flat .
29 Relevant state benefits for which the plaintiff must give credit should still be estimated and deducted when fixing the amount to be paid into court before a certificate is received as the plaintiff will be entitled to take out the whole amount in court and the defendant remains liable to reimburse the Secretary of State .
30 If I 'd had a gun I would have gone out and shoo shot out the whole neighbourhood .
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