Example sentences of "be [adv] out [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | And people like me , who prefer to communicate with words while flinging on random bits of any ‘ look ’ that happens to fit and be cleanish at the same time , are right out in the cold . |
2 | 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 . |
3 | I am just out of the bath . |
4 | Manager Harry McNally said : ‘ We are not out of the wood but we have been thrown a lifeline . |
5 | Power struggles are not out of the question and , if you are single , you may be drawn into a passionate , even obsessive liaison . |
6 | I mean , they 're not out of the way . |
7 | Once the door 's been locked at night and the medicine 's been round , you 're not out until the morning . |
8 | Yeah cos you 're not out in the morning must of heard from here . |
9 | And while Leith was thinking , heavens , Rosemary was a year older than her and had been married , and was starting to feel grateful that she had the parents she had , Rosemary was going on , ‘ They 're both out at the moment . ’ |
10 | 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 . |
11 | We 're too out of the way for mains electricity . ’ |
12 | I 'm sorry to say all hopes of a tranquil day are totally out of the question . |
13 | Skipper Ian Smith and prop Pete Jones , their 2 Scottish internationals , are both out of the game . |
14 | Skipper Ian Smith and prop Pete Jones , their 2 Scottish internationals , are both out of the game . |
15 | 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 . |
16 | He says , If the cinema should have nudity there , the statues should be inside out of the view of people . |
17 | I 'm not out in the world . ’ |
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 | Follow our step-by-step guide and be flat out at the finish |
26 | 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 . ) |
27 | England to be definitely out of the World Cup |
28 | He may be safely out of the way again now , but a lot of decent people have no safety and no homes . ’ |
29 | Sneaking in here when the shop 's closed and I 'm safely out of the way in the parlour ? |
30 | You are n't out of the wood yet . |