Example sentences of "out and [verb] [pron] in [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Just our own lighting plant and the hens would even come out and meet you in the dark they knew knew you were coming . |
2 | But I think I 'll know how to dig him out and take him in the later rounds . ’ |
3 | Speedwell jumped over the little brook that ran down the middle of the field and when Acorn tried to follow him and fell short , Silver joked with him as he scrambled out and rolled him in a patch of dead oak leaves until he was dry . |
4 | P : I was coming home from a party with Robert Mitchum drinking cider when one of Shane 's gang came out and stabbed me in the arm … ( goes on for about ten more pages — Freudian Ed ) |
5 | Used to take them out and shoot them in the head . |
6 | A great anger had heated up , one of Robertson 's new windows had been shattered by a stone , and the womenfolk had made a move to drag the teacher out and throw him in the river . |
7 | Keep it loose , you are not planting yet ; the purpose is simply to hold the bushes steady , to protect the roots from drying out and keep them in an environment that will encourage them to begin making new growth . |
8 | She loved them , and she loved the work though it left her with little time for going out and enjoying herself in the evenings . |
9 | Cut this out and stick it in the space on your super Daily Mirror wallchart |
10 | she said yeah she said sorted that out and put her in a trolley |
11 | While I ca n't say I actually enjoyed the experience — as usual , two shirts flaked me out and put me in a bad mood for the rest of the day — I did find the whole process a whole lot easier on the nerves than throwing a glass of water across a shirt in the hope that somehow the creases , along with the water , would eventually evaporate . |
12 | I once worked in the shopfloor in a factory , putting cream on to cream cakes , when I finished college , and they took me out and put me in the lab even though I did n't have any science degree , and I was in the labs for three months . |
13 | In fact , if he had n't have knocked him and out and put him in a coma in last round that Michael Watson would have won it . |
14 | And then when I went up home , I 'd have took them out and put them in the fridge and she says what are you doing and I says well that 's a couple of day 's meat for you and she says no no take that off home , take that off home , I 've and I says no that 'll do you . |
15 | Its unique refill system makes it very economical — when you have finished one bottle simply take the pump-mechanism out and put it in a refill — you can do this up to ten times . |
16 | But in latter days they came with a tank and they put it out and put it in a trailer you see but I just worked with bags when it was the first of it . |
17 | I really wanted to help them out and pointed them in the direction of Red Rhino and it was kind of their idea to put them out on Reception . |
18 | ‘ In Your Care ’ ( one of the album 's best tracks ) explores the thorny subject of child abuse in such a from-the-heart manner that the pain and confusion simply leap out and hit you in the tear ducts . |
19 | Imagine what it 's like ( if you are a Tory ) to be unable to drive down the street without every red or orange poster in every window appearing to leap out and stab you in the heart . |
20 | And erm it was ex ex it was great having Chris along because erm he went out and grabbed everybody in the street , pulled them in onto the stall and er and got them got them to sign on the dotted line so to speak . |
21 | ‘ She tore a few pages out and threw them in the bin . |
22 | He stubbed it out and threw it in the fire . |
23 | He would have to heave her blood-stained body away from the door and then scramble over it before he could race out and lose himself in the hills . |
24 | You can get vitamins by eating a healthy home diet of fruit and vegetables , or you can go out and get them in a bottle . ’ |
25 | He says you can still go out and enjoy yourself in the sun but it 's important to wear a hat and protective clothing — and to avoid the sun altogether when it 's at its height . |