Example sentences of "[noun] out for [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 For example , the myth that management development is a politically neutral , objective activity that brings the best talent out for service to the enterprise ( Lawrence , 1977 ) .
2 Just a couple of months out for Mentle would be enough for Pahdra Singh to cause havoc .
3 Told Mrs Hope to pull all the stops out for lunch tomorrow .
4 The movie , scheduled for release later this year , stars tough guy Sanjay Dutt as a martial arts expert out for revenge .
5 De Ferran out for hat-trick
6 With the Sky Blues aiming to overtake Norwich , Gould took his team out for pint or two of Guinness !
7 I keep an eye out for Lucker without much joy .
8 In practice that means keeping an eye out for leadership qualities and sometimes selecting on that basis and , at the same time , encouraging the absorption of certain leadership precepts by those who do not seem to possess them in a natural way .
9 Over-fishing is avoided , and two men employed to keep a wary eye out for mussel rustlers .
10 A playground supervisor is a guardian while she is on duty , acting with authority , keeping an eye out for trouble , intervening before tears or blood are shed !
11 You can eat anything there for lunch and I 'm going to put sandwiches and cake out for tea .
12 YET more charity catalogues out for spring .
13 The six passengers boarded the aircraft at about 1520 hours and the aircraft received clearance from Norwich Tower to taxi out for take-off on Runway 28 .
14 ‘ Maybe we can drag the Tree out for lunch soon . ’
15 The fare remains at £16.00 for adults and £10.00 for children giving a bargain day out for Christmas shopping in London .
16 ‘ A night out with John Minton , ’ Lehmann recorded in his diary in October 1951 , ‘ for which he arrived with a bunch of carnations in the wildest , gayest form , having been on a jag for three nights — and continued it that night in spite of my attempts at restraint ( which were spoiled by laughing all the time ) , flinging his arms about , shouting shrilly with highly risqué asseverations at the White Tower ( at which Tennessee [ Williams ] appeared for a hallucinatory moment ) , becoming embarrassingly affectionate and enthusiastic about me , and pouring money out for champagne in the Caribbean and another unidentified night club . ’
17 ‘ Get on , girl — if , as I must suppose , you are taking that brute out for exercise . ’
18 Keep a look out for head lice and treat if necessary .
19 ‘ Russian Souls ’ are ‘ unsure , doubting , vulnerable , continually on the look out for deception ’ and are frightened by choice .
20 Divide variegated perennials with great care and be on the look out for reversion to maintain a variegated display of interest and contrast to the lush green foliage of summer planting .
21 It is very important that you are always on the look out for safety hazards in the Home .
22 Out on the flats there is nothing to hide behind and the birds must keep a sharp look out for trouble .
23 I know because I called around early and took my sister out for tea .
24 Flat out for pocket TV
25 Snooker : Hendry flat out for win .
26 Erm the guy down who 's just done my my club earned himself eighteen hundred pound in one week and he paid about a hundred a twenty quid out for bed and breakfast .
27 The odds ratio for drop out for serotonin reuptake inhibitors compared with tricyclic and related antidepressants was estimated to be 0.95 , which was not significantly different from 1 ( 95% confidence interval 0.816 to 1.107 ) ( table III , fig 2 ) .
28 The blood ran down the inside of his arm , where the skin was pale , and collected in the palm of his hand as he held the wound out for Dad to look at .
29 Sir Harold rarely bought at auction and never lent his treasures out for exhibition , so most of the pictures are little known , with the exception of Frans Hals 's ‘ Merry lute player ’ , which is in fact in danger of overexposure .
30 Maybe it was for that reason that the party leader singled Mr Prescott 's past year performance out for praise in an interview in The Sunday Correspondent yesterday , calling him , chummily , ‘ Johnny ’ .
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