Example sentences of "to break out [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 A second planning battle looks set to break out over a building which was used by gospel worshippers in Darlington .
2 In popular imagery , the reading of a will is the occasion for bitter squabbles to break out over the deceased 's preferred distribution of assets , but the limited amount of research data which we have on this issue suggests that overt conflicts are not very common .
3 PF1/1 — the BREAKOUT key allows you to break out to a VMS subprocess , and to return to the same field on completion .
4 Less obvious is the offence by those teachers who are unable to break out of a strict interpretation of their teaching role , that is , as purveyors of information and nothing else .
5 Before the Second World War , to be sure , it looked as if the Labour Party would be unable to break out of a minority role in British politics .
6 Its diminished stature is mainly due to its continuing economic difficulties and its inability so far to break out of an increasingly stultifying dependence on Soviet aid and trade subsidies .
7 As the roots begin to break out of the grains the barley is transferred to a vast hall heated with warm air and turned by large malt shovels .
8 ‘ There are an increasing number of executives looking to break out of the corporate hierarchy , ’ he said .
9 It amounts to a call for a revolution in ways of thinking to break out of the constraints that a falsely mechanistic interpretation of science has imposed on ourselves and our world .
10 Walk to break out of the pattern and routine of normal daily living .
11 ‘ There are an increasing number of executives looking to break out of the corporate hierarchy and run their own business and it appears that MBIs are catching up with MBOs as a method of achieving that goal . ’
12 You 've got to break out of the rock guitar , Van Halen , Steve Vai syndrome .
13 Being a combination of social worker , medical auxiliary , and teacher to these miners and their families meant that he was able to break out of the prison of his hateful loneliness .
14 I believe that he is also calling us to break out of the margins and take the battle to the Enemy .
15 He wanted only to be gone , to break out of the circle of reproach and injury around him .
16 If your students need to break out of the intermediate doldrums …
17 It is possible to break out of the straight-jacket by applying an idea that had been used for many years in thinking about the psychology of classification and aesthetics ( McLlelland & Clark , 1933 ; Berlyne , 1960 ) .
18 The move by Precision to break out of the workstation market into the higher echelons of data analysis is , the company says , the first in a series of developments the firm is working on in the supercomputing arena .
19 Jamming the wires with announcements , Lotus has also committed itself to supply Lotus Notes for SCO 's Open Desktop , in a move , it says , to break out of the personal computer market .
20 Nevertheless , both avenues of research do not seek to break out of the basic structure adopted by the traditional method of legitimating the authority of corporate managers .
21 Obviously the snake arrangements required intervention by domestic monetary authorities when currencies looked likely to break out of the 2¼ per cent band .
22 Rather than respond defensively Labour should see this as an opportunity to break out of the strait-jacket politics of the Thatcher era .
23 A number of western historians of Russia , among whom the American professors Leopold Haimson and Reginald Zelnik were prominent , began to break out of the attitudes encouraged by the Cold War .
24 They move backward and forward between denial and anger and depression , unable to break out of the circle of despair by acceptance of what has happened .
25 But there are many teachers in many schools who feel the need to break out of the cycle of crisis management and low morale so keenly that they are prepared to make those commitments .
26 Both were from the same village as Mr Shahiduddin Postman ; both had managed to get educated and to break out of the village on to the lower rungs of academia .
27 The clearest way forward is to break out of the restrictive conceptual framework within which both Hall and Jessop et al.
28 Always at the back of his mind was a serious actor trying to break out of the ‘ Carry On ’ mould , but while he was wanted for nothing more , says Percival , he was ready to go on showing that he was better than anyone else .
29 It is a trend that supermarkets are belatedly beginning to recognise and is forcing them to break out of the straight jacket of their centralised buying habits .
30 Cash was the first country star since Jim Reeves to break out into the pop charts .
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