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

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1 From his point of view , Modernism as a sub-species of romantic anti-capitalism is one partial moment in the rejection of the consequences of Enlightenment properly understood : understood , that is , in terms of a Marxism which is itself held out as the genuine heir to the Enlightenment narrative of emancipation and its romantic critique .
2 Look out for the narrow entrance to Swan Yard next to ‘ Debenhams ’ .
3 From Western Province , he moved out of the first-class game to Boland but last year returned to the South African top flight with Orange Free State .
4 Out of this fundamental rationale , and out of the geographical proximity to Japan of colonies or potential colonies , grew a distinct set of colonial policies .
5 The bookies installed the Gunners as favourites for the title — only to halve their odds against dropping out of the Premier League to 50-1 after just one week !
6 Willie walked shakily out of the inner door to the porch .
7 Rivalry with France was one theme in the centuries of empire to come , but after the loss of Calais the English concentrated on capturing French colonies or in restraining French attempts to dominate Europe rather than on trying to make anything substantial out of the nominal claim to the French crown that English kings asserted until 1801 .
8 He took a very pretty and rather commodious cottage-residence at Southall Green , Middlesex , about a mile out of the high road to Uxbridge , and exactly 10 miles from Tyburn Gate .
9 They began to pick a path down out of the high land to where the towns and villages of Ralarth and its fiefs stretched green below them into the far distance , silent under the early sunlight .
10 Attempts to move Currys gradually out of the high street to larger edge-of-town and out-of-town stores and to tone down Dixons ' garish image have yet to bear fruit .
11 The Middlesex batsman , left out of the senior trip to India and the ‘ A ’ team tour of Australia , has paid the penalty for two bust-ups with his county and a lack of form in Tests .
12 The manager who has watched the same side go out of the Scottish Cup to the Premier Division 's bottom club ( Falkirk ) while inflicting all manner of wounds on their championship prospects saw his players do well enough not to have their efforts diminished by dwelling on Rangers ' inertia .
13 The manager , who has watched the same side go out of the Scottish Cup to the Premier Division 's bottom club ( Falkirk ) while inflicting all manner of wounds on their championship prospects , saw his players do well enough not to have their efforts diminished by dwelling on Rangers ' inertia .
14 She rushed down the corridor , through the kitchen , out of the back door to the shed and ran back with the barrow and the spade clattering on top .
15 He glanced out of the open door to the garden .
16 The happy voices , the beat of the band , had drifted out of the open window to the street , including the neighbourhood in the festivities .
17 The Metropolitan Line grew fast in the 1860S and 1870S , the District Line joined it and it spread its branches out into the open countryside to the north-west of London .
18 This is a bit of the continent , sticking out into the warmer sea to the south-east .
19 Straggling , beaten columns of troops marched without equipment into the town and out along the main road to Kiev .
20 Goods sold in the shops can lead out from the immediate locality to the mills , workshops and factories of the industrial revolution , and indeed Empire produced goods will introduce a world horizon .
21 When the antenna now clipped to the rain-gutter above the passenger-door heard the blip emitted from the D/F transmitter in Quinn 's attaché case , a line would race out from the glowing dot to the perimeter of the screen .
22 The rules which must be followed in arranging and conducting the election are set out in the first schedule to the 1983 Act as amended .
23 Despite the myths which surround the Act , it turned out in the long term to be quite efficient and reasonably humane , but the threat of transition sparked off another series of troubles in Sussex , the last concerted fling of desperation .
24 The balance it had to seek between guarding standards and promoting institutional development was worked out in the constant attention to the details of courses and the means of their delivery , in subject areas pioneered by the NCTA , and in the new — and sometimes unique — programmes being considered and approved .
25 The German mortaring had suddenly stopped and the Brigade Major was standing out in the open talking to an Officer when , just as suddenly , the mortars started up again , sending their bombs swishing through the trees and sending the Brigade Major diving for cover .
26 The rights are set out in the Eighth Schedule to the 1971 Act and are divided into two parts : Part I allows for the full rebuilding of any building and Part II for its extension .
27 The detailed sale procedures may either be set out in the covering letter to the information memorandum or as a section of the information memorandum .
28 Insert needle again in the lower stitch and bring it out in the next stitch to the left ( Fig. 2 ) .
29 The treatment plan is not equipped to deal effectively with waste of such high chemical toxicity , and so much of it is passed out in the Yellow Creek to be carried away into the Cumberland River , with the result that the creek has become severely polluted .
30 ‘ The marshal , ’ complained one of his officers even before they set out on the futile march to Carlisle , ‘ is infirm and peevish … both in body and mind , forgetful , irresolute and perplext . ’
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