Example sentences of "out [prep] [pron] [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If the Danish Government was able to distribute 300,000 copies of the Maastricht text through newsagents and libraries , who has decided here , or in Brussels , that the British public should not be allowed to find out for themselves during the election what the small print of the treaty contains ?
2 ‘ Yes , I brought her the tray Mrs Porter had set out for her in the kitchen .
3 Because she had spent so much of her teenage by herself , she had found plenty of time to read the newspapers and the books Patsy would bring home from school , or take out for her from the school library .
4 It 's only one o nine , I 'm gon na get some out for me in the church , next week .
5 And I was delighted to have the neighbourhood laid out for me in the way a child sees its domain , and to earn a little money and receive from Mme Bluot the excellent unsold cakes and breads she would otherwise have had Didier feed to the ducks .
6 Mrs Parvis was standing out on the front doorstep , pretending to watch out for something in the sky .
7 It was essential to be able to put a hand out for something in the dark without knocking over a jug of water , or sending a pee-bottle flying .
8 The kind of tasks carried out for them by the support workers is similarly hard to classify .
9 Matters can be most easily be sorted out for you on the spot whilst you are in resort , when your Representative , who is authorised to deal fully with any complaint , can see and understand the exact nature of any problems you have .
10 And it 's supposed to keep me from reaching out for you in the night , wrapping my arms around you , letting my lips tangle in your hair … ’
11 It 's alright , I 'll look out for you in the Pentam
12 Getting lazily to his feet , he went out , and returned a few minutes later to announce , ‘ There 's a snack being laid out for you in the dining-room .
13 Watch out for it on the ski slopes — if red is the choice , at least you 'll see it coming !
14 A survey of 295 property inheritors carried out for it by the Housing Research Foundation confirmed that two-thirds of inheritors promptly sold the houses they were left , whereas 22% moved into them .
15 ‘ I saw a woman run out past me down the street with her clothes and hair on fire .
16 ‘ I saw a woman run out past me down the street with her clothes and hair on fire .
17 The scabby , festering evil went out of him at the touch of this holy place .
18 We do n't know exactly where but it must have been close , as he dragged himself home to his favourite spot on the lawn where his life ebbed out of him in the quiet of the night .
19 Matthew , as usual , was unwilling to answer a straight question , but I got it out of him in the end .
20 Her name is Elisa Stasi and that 's the last bit of information you 're getting out of me on the subject .
21 The question was wrung out of me by the absurdity of it .
22 So why put him under the pressure , she sa cos I said , I want to know what the long-term effect of me taking him out of this is , because , effectively I 'm taking him out of something of the system , knowing , he 's going to miss that .
23 The estate and the house might both be high-value assets , but the conditions of his inheritance forced him to keep both intact and he got little currency out of them beyond the woodland leases and the shooting rights .
24 Sound thrust out of them on the milling pavement .
25 I guess I wanta play polo better so I can beat the shit out of them on the field . ’
26 The door had n't opened , but there had n't been another sound out of them for the rest of the night .
27 They both gasped as the breath was knocked out of them by the impact .
28 While going through the worst of the tantrum season , keep in mind that most children grow out of them by the time they 're three — this thought will help you to cope when you just feel like hiding !
29 Because although the hotpots cost a pound er most people er will will buy drinks at the bar and er we 'll make fifty P out of them in the evening at the bar so you know we 'll make five pounds from anybody we sell tickets to from now on .
30 We travelled the countryside by day and by night in buses , and were tumbled out of them in the blackout to grope our way ‘ home ’ through streets which , in their uniform monotony , were hardly distinguishable one from another , our torches , with their regulation double layer of tissue-paper over the bulb , showing like grounded fireflies in the intense darkness .
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