Example sentences of "be [adv] [adv prt] of the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It 's an aircraft which has been rarely out of the headlines in it 's 25 years with the RAF .
2 Your financial situation can improve , but you may have to wait until next year before you are entirely out of the woods .
3 And had known , took , took part in every one , right up I 'd never been away out of the town in the time the was on .
4 I am just out of the bath .
5 The only championship now open to Falls ' senior side is the PGL Division One title as they are already out of the CIS Irish Senior Cup and the PGL Milk Senior Cup which continues on Wednesday night with the following fixtures .
6 Manager Harry McNally said : ‘ We are not out of the wood but we have been thrown a lifeline .
7 Power struggles are not out of the question and , if you are single , you may be drawn into a passionate , even obsessive liaison .
8 But we are not out of the woods .
9 We have been and some would still have us believe , I think it 's true , we 're not out of the woods yet as far as er er recovery of the housing market is concerned .
10 I mean , they 're not out of the way .
11 You have to spend years and years working off the initial residue of suspicion and diffidence before you 're even out of the red , let alone seeing any positive return for your efforts .
12 We 're too out of the way for mains electricity . ’
13 I 'm sorry to say all hopes of a tranquil day are totally out of the question .
14 Skipper Ian Smith and prop Pete Jones , their 2 Scottish internationals , are both out of the game .
15 Skipper Ian Smith and prop Pete Jones , their 2 Scottish internationals , are both out of the game .
16 Everything he hits seems to be right out of the middle and he also has a much better routine with his putting now that caddy Fanny Sunesson has stopped her ‘ wicketkeeper ’ pose behind his stance .
17 He says , If the cinema should have nudity there , the statues should be inside out of the view of people .
18 Then , after a bit , it becomes not something unacceptable , but something accepted or at least something which is demonstrated to be not out of the question .
19 For your own good , at least for the next year or so , I think you 'd be best out of the way .
20 He said this did not amount to a demand for a right of veto : ‘ The principle we stick to is that the PLO will be totally out of the picture . ’
21 This was highly unusual , since most golfers prefer their caddies to be well out of the way for such crucial short putts .
22 Medical examination of each child would then be almost out of the question ’ .
23 And Breeze 's heart sank still lower as she reflected that if they were really penniless , an artistic career with its inevitable ups and downs would be quite out of the question .
24 To defy convention , surrender her virginity , to a man she neither loved nor desired must be quite out of the question .
25 It is significant that one of the few occasions when the author of Ancrene Wisse hints at the contemplative experience occurs in his account of the behaviour appropriate at the Mass : ( After the kiss of peace in the Mass , when the priest communicates , forget the world , be completely out of the body , and with burning love embrace your Beloved who has come down from heaven to your heart 's bower , and hold Him fast until He has granted you all that you ask . )
26 England to be definitely out of the World Cup
27 He may be safely out of the way again now , but a lot of decent people have no safety and no homes . ’
28 Sneaking in here when the shop 's closed and I 'm safely out of the way in the parlour ?
29 You are n't out of the wood yet .
30 Three of her rivals are well out of the handicap ; Celtic Bob will not be improving at 13 ; and Petty Bridge needs a much longer trip .
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