Example sentences of "to be [verb] out [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Unaffected adventurers can help their friends to leave the Tower , but affected characters will have to be manhandled out of the place .
2 It is difficult to say that such a vast group of people has special needs , and indeed many older people may prefer not to be separated out from the rest of the adult population .
3 Would-be clowns , acrobats , trapeze artists , ( and , for all I know , nutters who want to be shot out of the mouth of a cannon ) are all invited to join the greatest show in Darlington .
4 The difficulties of constructing the road ( and even more so the railway ) are plain to see : much had to be cut out of the living rock , netted to arrest stonefalls , and at one point both pass through a tunnel .
5 But they 're going to be cut out from the two litre bottle range er if they 've got a bad back or these sort of situations .
6 Details for opening the ‘ corridors ’ are to be thrashed out over the next four days .
7 Speed boats and fishing nets also need to be kept out of the area .
8 They had to be kept out of the water until they had lost their baby down and grown waterproof adult oily feathers .
9 But he is likely to be kept out of the team by Prost who is believed to have a deal which bars the Brazilian from coming in as his partner .
10 He wants the sheep to be kept out of the industrial estate .
11 A provision for division of profits after the firm 's annual accounts have been approved ( see below ) but with provision for appropriate amounts on account of anticipated liability to income tax to be withheld out of the undrawn balance of each partner 's share at the year 's end ( Clause 10.02 ) and for repayment of excessive drawings ( Clause 10.03 ) .
12 The restrictions began to be phased out towards the end of the month .
13 Subject to Section 310 of the Act , every Director or other officer of the Company shall be entitled to be indemnified out of the assets of the Company against all losses or liabilities which he may sustain or incur in or about the execution of the duties of his office or otherwise in relation thereto , including any liability incurred by him in defending any proceedings , whether civil or criminal , in which judgement is given in his favour or in which he is acquitted or in connection with any application under Sections 144(3) or ( 4 ) or 727 of the Act in which relief is granted to him by the Court , and no Director or other officer shall be liable for any loss , damage or misfortune which may happen to or be incurred by the Company in the execution of the duties of his office or in relation thereto .
14 Subject to Section 310 of the Act , every Director or other officer of the Company shall be entitled to be indemnified out of the assets of the Company against all losses or liabilities which he may sustain or incur in or about the execution of the duties of his office or otherwise in relation thereto , including any liability incurred by him in defending any proceedings , whether civil or criminal , in which judgement is given in his favour or in which he is acquitted or in connection with any application under Sections 144(3) or ( 4 ) or 727 of the Act in which relief is granted to him by the Court , and no Director or other officer shall be liable for any loss , damage or misfortune which may happen to or be incurred by the Company in the execution of the duties of his office or in relation thereto .
15 His little blue bright eyes , hard and round , that seemed this morning to be protruding out of the shallow creamy lakes around them , were full of hate for her .
16 However , as the table has to be moved out of the way whenever the patient gets up , it should not be too heavy , or have too many items on it at one time .
17 All the Louvre 's sculptures are to be moved out of the remote Pavillon de Flore in the south-west wing and rehoused after being divided , for the first time , into French and non-French works .
18 New technology has already enabled an ever-widening range of jobs to be moved out of the office , allowing staff to carry them out from their own homes with obvious benefits in terms of reducing office overheads as well as enabling businesses to recruit from an additional pool of people who , because of location in remote rural areas or conflicting domestic responsibilities , might otherwise be ruled out of employment .
19 And we had sixty pullets at the point of lay in this house to be moved out from the house to a field .
20 It would therefore appear that where , for example , a solicitor on behalf of his client commences a personal injury action which includes a claim for damages of less than £50,000 by way of writ in the High Court , the proceedings are bound to be struck out on the basis that the solicitor ought to have known of the provision contained in art 5(1) of the 1991 Order .
21 You do n't understand the humiliation of it — to be tricked out of the single assumption which makes our existence viable — that somebody is watching …
22 For days he backed the little transport box into the huge mound and went up and down the fields in lines , stopping the tractor every few yards to scatter the lime , tossing each shovelful on the wind for the white dust to be blown out over the grass .
23 Problems with pistons and piston rings are usually accompanied by high crankcase pressures which cause oil to be blown out of the front and rear crankshaft seals and the dipstick tube and breather pipes .
24 A command which causes lines of the current program to be listed out to the screen with the automatic formatting options specified by LISTO .
25 The possibility of an increase in Japanese interest rates was raised , but seemed to be ruled out for the present by the Finance Minister , Ryutaro Hashimoto , in a statement made after his return to Tokyo .
26 ( The other member of the fusion club , the Soviet Union , seems to be ruled out of the project ) .
27 But likely to be ruled out of the action is full-back Keith Proctor , who has suffered a reaction to his first game back after a six-week injury lay-off he played for the reserves last weekend and is now likely to have to see a specialist about his troublesome knee .
28 But likely to be ruled out of the action is fullback Keith Proctor , who has suffered a reaction to his first game back after a six-week injury lay-off he played for the reserves last weekend and is now likely to have to see a specialist about his troublesome knee .
29 Roddie had the ball in the net on two other occasions only to be ruled out by the referee for infringements , and Iceland duly rubbed salt in the wounds when Feyenoord 's Arnar Gunnlaugsson crossed from the right and Thordur Gudjonsson blasted the equaliser past substitute goalkeeper Jim Will .
30 No need , or less need , to plan more of a book which is to be written out of the right-hand side of your brain , out of intuition .
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