Example sentences of "[prep] out [prep] [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | There 's a lot of out to the hospital though in n it ? |
2 | They went up there like a couple of out of a gun , when I opened the door ! |
3 | This experience appeared to transform him and he threw himself into a great surge of composition , writing a Mass of Thanksgiving for unaccompanied choir filling 100 pages of manuscript , which he completed in 15 days , as well as other works , including a setting of Out of the Deep which is given its first performance by his choir at St Philip and St James , Cheltenham , at his funeral on today . |
4 | They recorded their new demos not under the blazing summary affluence of a Compass Point but in the rundown but equally effective ruins of Out Of The Blue , an eight-track studio in the rat-infested decay of Ancoats , Manchester . |
5 | In the Duddon Valley on Little Blake Rigg up a wall right of Out Of The Game , The Sellafield Shuffle — E3 6a — has been climbed by S. Wood and A. Rowell . |
6 | It is dealt with in detail here because visitors in search of out of the way spots are almost certain to pass through it on their way to Appenzell , or even to break their journey here . |
7 | So you 're saying , there 's more chance of getting the blue out of out of the second , than there is of just |
8 | Is this sort of out of the question , or |
9 | It 's really quite warm now out sort of out of the wind . |
10 | I parked sort of out in the car park and then got a tr a trolley and wheeled it rather than have to try and get back into that lot . |
11 | Ai n't it , it 's like out of a porno mag . |
12 | If I 'm looking for anything I prefer to shop in , but if I 'm just browsing I do n't mind going like out of the town , down to or up to for a day but , if I 'm looking for something particular I prefer to stay in cos I know where to go . |
13 | Yes , I think that 's fair enough , let's get on with it and clear into out of the system anyway shall we ? |
14 | ‘ My dear , ’ she laughed , ‘ talk about out of the mouths of babes and sucklings ! |
15 | Polaris was paid for out of a Central Staff vote . |
16 | This means that costs are kept to a minimum because overheads , such as lighting , equipment , and any little extras , are paid for out of a centralised annual fund . |
17 | These items are usually paid for out of the petty cash . |
18 | And that sum will be paid for out of the scrap value of the old thick copper cable used in the original 1950s electrification . |
19 | This does not include the cost of champions or of chariots ridden by characters ( both of these are paid for out of the Characters allowance ) . |
20 | This does not include the cost of champions , who are paid for out of the character allowance . |
21 | The work , which is being paid for out of the memorial fund launched after Whillans ' death , began recently and is due to be completed by this autumn . |
22 | Three main questions were therefore addressed : did non-fundholders reduce their rate of referral outside the boundaries of their local district health authority ? did first wave fundholders reduce their referral rates to NHS outpatient clinics and , if so , which specialties and which patients were affected ? did the proportion of patients referred by fundholders to private clinics increase and how many private referrals were paid for out of the NHS budget ? |
23 | The number of NHS patients referred from fundholding practices to private clinics ( paid for out of the fundholder 's budget ) in phase 2 was small : of the 59 referrals that fell into this category , most were for vasectomy or female sterilisation . |
24 | Most importantly , it has shown what advances are possible given enthusiasm , goodwill and a full-time secretary paid for out of the Legal Aid Fund . |
25 | We support the proposition that the provision of access beyond existing Rights of Way should be paid for out of the public purse . |
26 | By and large , those extra ’ advantages ’ , as the Labour party calls them , for the employee have to be paid for out of the profits of the organisation as a whole and they eat away at the capital that the business would ultimately have available to reinvest in jobs . |
27 | The claims of the careless , or merely unlucky , are paid for out of the premiums of the careful , or lucky . |
28 | The bill for the refurbishment will be paid for out of the government-backed Urban Programme . |
29 | It is thus appropriate that she should begin her enterprise in Out with an investigation of that originary metaphor described by Nietzsche , the act of perception . |
30 | He dined discriminatingly from out of a stasis-box on spiced foetal lambkin stuffed with truffles ; and he sipped gloryberry juice . |