Example sentences of "[modal v] come out [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Once a Met Officer remarked cheerfully to me ( from the warmth and light of the office ) , that the rats were much more frightened of me than I was of them , but I noticed that he did n't take me up on my suggestion that he should come out with me and see for himself .
2 Her was not given to eloquence about the beauties of the countryside , and was puzzled that he should come out with this remark .
3 I am amazed that the hon. Gentleman should come out with those remarks about the deterrent in which we are investing just when his party is purporting to change its policy .
4 But now you should come out of your shell .
5 The dealer would also imply that the client should come out of the new Rolls Royce issue immediately .
6 useless but I mean they should come out of somebody 's drawer under their own personal supply .
7 Statistically only 0–05 per cent of chance tetrads should come out at this length or less , so that the expected number of alignments like Craigeam lies between 0.00041 for standing stones and 0.0037 for stone circles .
8 From the start , there was much confusion about who should come out on strike to support the miners .
9 But I I should come out in great welts soon and start looking like an American werewolf in London .
10 Well I think that Bruce Kent should call for a referendum on the issue and I think the Labour Party should come out in favour of that .
11 ‘ I think , ’ she went on , ‘ now that we have more than half the land — and most of the best part — you must come out into the open .
12 The ideas are there ; now they must come out of academe and into the clinic .
13 If he finds the Thief , all the ‘ plants ’ must come out of hiding .
14 ‘ You must come out of the sun , Mr Gray , ’ said Lord Henry .
15 It appears to me therefore that if a man diligently followed this desire , pursuing the false objects until their falsity appeared and then resolutely abandoning them , he must come out at last into the clear knowledge that the human soul was made to enjoy some object that is never fully given — nay , can not even be imagined as given — in our present mode of subjective and spatio-temporal experience .
16 Fear slowed his thoughts , and grudgingly granted him one consolation : at this speed they must come out at the bottom a damn sight faster than they went through at the top .
17 He told the Governor that ‘ Rance must come out with a new policy , with proposals that go beyond the White paper [ of May 1945 ] .
18 ‘ People were extremely disappointed that conservationists could not come up with exciting positive solutions for potential land that might come out of agriculture , ’ says Miss Appleby .
19 What might come out of this cosmic turmoil ?
20 It was crazy to hope that good might come out of this plaguy mess , but at least it was different from anything that had happened to her before .
21 The opportunity for a negotiated peace had been lost — and with it the hope that anything good might come out of the Great War .
22 Some good things might come out of me now .
23 Anything might come out of the sky .
24 Although he did not underestimate the dangers of insurgent Communism , and considered it pathetic that the Soviet leaders should have as their strict aim the overtaking of the Capitalist states , he still felt that something might come out of Russia from which all might benefit .
25 ‘ He genuinely felt that by doing this he was helping others , and something good might come out of his suffering . ’
26 The kind of thing you might come out with after being hit with a baseball bat . ’
27 As far as I understand from the gossip there 's nothing 'll come out of it by goin' to the polis ; it 's got to come from Parliament .
28 Chances are he 'll come out of it .
29 ‘ I 'll come out of it unscathed .
30 On Friday they 'll come out of the garage , to be seen by around 60,000 visitors at the Spring Gardening Show in Malvern .
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