Example sentences of "to come [adv prt] of the " in BNC.

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1 Meanwhile the also sympathetic but Grahamly maddening Tim is struggling to move into a flat on the row , while supposing himself to be struggling to come out of the closet .
2 They were afraid of their shite to come out of the towns .
3 the sky was a beautiful blue , the sun in just the right position for the rainbows to come out of the cleft in exactly the right position photographically .
4 Just when you thought it was safe to come out of the closet .
5 You expect fire to come out of the back of his ball when he hits it , but his ball 's flight is no different to mine .
6 You expect fire to come out of the back of his ball when he hits it , but his ball 's flight is no different to mine .
7 The Ministry of Defence objected on three grounds : the increase in nuclear missiles available to the West was operationally unnecessary and would only add to the existing nuclear overkill ; mixed manning was a formula for military disaster ; and the cost of the British share would have to come out of the already overstretched Defence budget .
8 It is time for men to come out of the nursery .
9 De Niro 's lengthy career began in small theatre productions at the start of the Sixties , and has included two Academy Awards ( for Raging Bull and The Godfather II ) and a collaboration with Martin Scorsese which produced some of the best films to come out of the ‘ New Hollywood ’ of the Seventies .
10 The Crucible , the play which showed the clear parallel between the McCarthy mentality and the Salem witch-hunt of 1692 , was perhaps the only enduring work of art to come out of the period .
11 THE ALTO saxophonist Arthur Blythe is just about the most accessible performer to come out of the free jazz movement of the '60s and '70s .
12 The most important point to come out of the Crabb affair was that it showed that the intelligence services were prepared to carry out operations contrary to the direct orders of the prime minister who was in charge of them .
13 Already in his first novel , Boccalone ( 1979 ) , widely recognized as the best to come out of the youth movement of the late 1970s , Palandri had shown an extraordinary ability to create sufficient space for his characters , ‘ enrico ’ and ‘ anna ’ and their friends , to speak for themselves without being overwhelmed by the surrounding clutter or by the pretensions of ‘ literature ’ , pretensions from which the narrator keeps his distance : ‘ I do n't want to make big speeches , I never did when I was with anna and I was better off ; I just want to recount incidents and let the rest come out of that , if there actually is anything ’ ( Palandri 1979 : 124 ) .
14 Otherwise , it may be easier for the patient to come out of the back door and walk or be wheeled out through a side gate , if it is all on a level .
15 Wherever you were stationed postings tended to come out of the blue , and you would quite often arrive back from leave to find that in your absence you had been posted elsewhere .
16 Perhaps the one good thing to come out of the accident was the searching nature of the many investigations into what caused it .
17 The move towards cooperation stems from the Versailles summit last June and is one of the few positive initiatives to come out of the seven-nation meeting .
18 The announcement last week was the first bit of positive news to come out of the beleaguered EPA for weeks .
19 Sucralose is one of the few products to come out of the Reading research labs that T&L felt it had the resources to develop through to the market .
20 It was the time when many stars started to come out of the political closet and openly voiced their support for one candidate or another .
21 THE STORY of British incompetence wasting the flower of ANZAC youth on a Dardanelles beach , this was one of two great war flicks to come out of the late '70s/early '80s Australian movie boom ( the ‘ Nam-set The Odd Angry Shot was the other ) .
22 The experience against those rivals will be provided by former England captain and club captain John Orwin who said : ‘ We know each other very well and frankly we would have preferred to come out of the hat first .
23 When she went into the rest room she sat down for a minute while waiting for Peggy to come out of the lavatory .
24 There 's still fleece on the outside , so once the drizzle or the rain starts , a waterproof needs to come out of the sack .
25 It 's only as you begin to come out of the Ketamine state that you begin to appreciate where you are or where you 've been .
26 The cost of this is to come out of the subscription of £25 per year .
27 I had a kind of ear infection which caused giddiness and I had to come out of the West End play I was appearing in at the time , The Rose Tattoo .
28 ‘ It 's so sad because he 's so quick , so experienced and he is the guy who made me raise my own game to come out of the blocks ahead of him . ’
29 TECHNO CLASSICS Vol 1 ’ is the well sorted compilation to come out of the mighty Rising High stable , and Casper and his mates have given us FIVE CD copies to give away !
30 The Black Dog are at the forefront of a pack which often seems to have no desire to come out of the woodwork .
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