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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Of his early paintings little is known , as he destroyed most of them between 1941 and 1944 , although as early as 1934 a crucifixion exhibited in a Curzon Street basement was singled out for praise by the critic Herbert Read .
2 She 'd been shaken rudely out of sleep by the sound of peremptory knocking on the back door of the farmhouse , at what felt like the crack of dawn .
3 But at least there is near unanimity that we really will be out of recession by the end of the year .
4 Without new orders , the shipyard would have run out of work by the end of next year .
5 Chen says he is still looking for new sources of finance that would enable the company to re-hire the 320 people thrown out of work by the closure , but does not hold out much hope .
6 But once Naas Botha equalised in kind , the tourists edged ahead and were out of sight by the time Danie Gerber scored their fourth try in the last minute .
7 It was ruled out of order by the Standing Orders Committee as it fell foul of rule A three , the subject was within the remit of Congress .
8 But when it was discussed by councillors , a move to censure him was ruled out of order by the convener , Jackie Tait .
9 There were suggestions from the American air force that the controls may have been put out of order by the fire which caused the crash and that , even if the pilot had stayed in his cockpit until the collision , he would not have been able to do more .
10 If not , then he will be out of contract by the end of the year .
11 By the early 1950s the binder had been rendered out of date by the combine harvester , which cut the crop and separated out the grain in one operation .
12 They proved almost useless , for the ebb and flow of the fighting hindered the collection of accurate information , and such as was gleaned was usually out of date by the time of its transmission .
13 We emphasis that the information available at press date may become out of date by the time of publication , but we believe that this will apply only if additional deployments are announced or revealed .
14 The aim was to improve on the situation inbuilt in manual systems whereby information is sampled at intervals and may be several weeks out of date by the time it has been assembled .
15 Those rates may be completely out of date by the time a statement of the special damages claimed is drawn up , and even more so by the time the action is tried .
16 Those calculations might be out of date by the time the application is made .
17 If you 've got carbon monoxide poisoning one of the problems is that your blood ca n't carry the oxygen because the red blood cells are being put out of action by the carbon monoxide .
18 The situation will be reviewed this morning by a medical-nursing and management team but according to an insider , the five operating theatres knocked out of action by the bomb may not be deemed re-sterilised before Friday .
19 This condition is called Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency , occurring when the pancreas is put out of action by the body 's own immune system which is supposed to protect it — a possible autoimmune disorder ( see Dogs Today October issue ) .
20 They knew what this new attack would mean to them , that more little shopkeepers would be driven out of business by the poverty of the people and their inability to purchase goods .
21 He was out of breath by the time he had canted her back , ground her round , settled the chair on the rough track again .
22 A survey by Barnardos paints a picture of families running out of food by the weekend and of youngsters who ca n't go to school because they 've no shoes .
23 The 1990 edition of the World Bank 's World Development Report , published on July 16 , called for a new initiative aimed at " lifting 400 million people out of poverty by the year 2000 " .
24 There is something paradoxical about this aspiration to lift myself out of nature by the use of reason , since I can not without setting arbitrary limits to reason forbid the sciences of physiology , psychology and sociology to reincorporate me into nature , as a phenomenon in principle explainable and predictable like everything else .
25 In Thackeray 's Pendennis ( 1848–50 ) , for example , Lady Clavering , whose London house has been made over to the interior decorators , is put out of countenance by the result .
26 All Delhi is thrown out of gear by the chaos .
27 The increasing range of new and improved telecommunications services can have potentially profound effects on future travel and home-based employment opportunities , because certain types of jobs do not need face-to-face contact and may be carried out from home by the linking of the telephone to home computers or the use of other teleconferencing , text-handling or information-retrieval systems .
28 any accident loss damage or liability caused sustained or incurred while any Caravan described in the Schedule is let out on hire by the Policyholder being used otherwise than for social domestic and pleasure purposes
29 The operation was carried out without negligence by the surgeon but the plaintiff was severely disabled as a result of damage to her spinal cord .
30 , there were of course two deaths , Piggy and Simon , the bodies of whom were carried out to sea by the current .
  Next page