Example sentences of "[adv] out at [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Then an immature gannet came into view away out at sea , a huge bird , still in mottled dark brown plumage . |
2 | Beneath a large pyramid of facts lie the great deeds of Robin Smith , DeFreitas , Tufnell , Richardson , Hooper , Richards , Ambrose , Marshall , and , perhaps most memorably , Gooch , who magnificent 154 not out at Headingley showed England the way . |
3 | Border , who scored 20 not out at No. 8 , declared at 367 for 6 : although India 's target was 441 , memories of Adelaide suggested an exciting final day , especially after Sidhu ( 24 ) and Srikkanth ( 26 ) knocked off 55 of those runs by stumps . |
4 | He played in six series against England and only in the last , in 1963 , did he fail with the bat ; other big scores included 191 not out , again at Nottingham , carrying his bat to help save the third Test of 1957 , and 197 not out at Barbados in the first match of 1959–60 again to ensure a draw after a big England innings . |
5 | The one he wanted was still out at lunch . |
6 | When I got back to my office , the Hinkle was still out at lunch . |
7 | Well whether she never saw her indicating or owt but she pulled straight out at end straight into her crushed her legs . |
8 | Also out at Hannover will be a new version of SNI 's UTM distributed transaction monitor for Unix , backup and spool and a modularised version of the Sinix operating system for use on personal computers . |
9 | He is rarely out at night and is largely free to organize his activities so that in bad weather , for example , he can catch up on paperwork in the dry and warmth of the office . |
10 | Panting and breathless , she forged ahead , looking now at the cliffs of North Foreland , which looked within walking distance today , and now at some fishing-boats far out at sea . |
11 | Usually kittiwakes are seen only far out at sea in winter ; this one must have been blown inland , to die . |
12 | like cannon , far out at sea on a lone ship . |
13 | Breeds on ledges on sea cliffs and in sea caves , exceptionally also on buildings , shingle or dunes by the sea ; in winter mainly well out at sea , though flocks occasionally visit coast . |
14 | The islanders are industrious ; they are either out at work or working at home . |
15 | ‘ You say Stratton was quite definitely out at Didcot when Kemp was being killed ? ’ |
16 | In fact most of the pressures the wildlife face are actually out at sea and there 's not really all that much we can do when that 's the case . |