Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] out [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I bus-hopped down to Covent Garden to start putting the feelers out for Werewolf .
2 It set fire to the sheets , but luckily he managed to put the flames out with some water . ’
3 After a few heart-stopping moments the old engine coughed into life , and he managed to accelerate the loaded vehicle through the flames out to safety .
4 His successor , Majorian , apparently overthrew this arrangement , pushing the Burgundians out of the environs of Lyons in 458 .
5 But Mannheim was referring more to the form of knowledge — the meanings out of which ideas could be constructed and understood — than to the substance of particular ideologies .
6 And though she cherished the times when Friend soared in companionship beside her through forever , always — reluctantly , it seemed sometimes , but always — he would pluck new motes of light and weave them into new shapes for her to read , but the shapes only made sense in their beauty , not in the real world where the coarseness of eating and cleaning and going to the toilet squashed the meanings out of the corners of her eyes .
7 He followed the signs out to the airport to the north .
8 this is all out of his back window the views out of upstairs , out of his kitchen window .
9 Perhaps it is for that reason that Britain will find greater interest in discussing the problems of the former Soviet Union and in establishing the rouble stabilisation fund — even though it will mean us pledging about $600m to help keep the Reds out of the red .
10 Rommel arrived at Alamein , the Russians drove the Germans out of Russia , English and American troops landed on the continent , whole German cities were razed to the ground in one night : I heard it all from the same patch of sand , four hundred yards long by a hundred wide in the middle of a Silesian Pine forest .
11 In yet a second , spirited dawn attack on the 10th , his regiment had pushed the Germans out of another small wood adjacent to the Bois des Corbeaux .
12 I was not very old when Dad told me that if you stood under it for very long , it would attract the coins out of your pocket .
13 Something as innocuous as suggesting to another student that a life preparation student should be allowed to take the coins out of her purse unaided may , inadvertently , upset the nursery nurse student in the short term .
14 I spread the coins out in my hand and have a look .
15 He held the notes out to her , but did n't relinquish them when she reached out her hand .
16 Setting the briefcase back down , she dug the notes out of the pocket and turned to the last page , smiling rather nastily .
17 ‘ I think you could charm the birds out of their trees , as they say … ’ she murmured .
18 She 's been trying to get the Blaneys out for some time .
19 Robyn laid the plans out on the grass and knelt beside them .
20 After two months , they finally voted the plans out by five votes to four — their reasons included an objection to the height of the pyramid and the effect it would have on the view of the city , the loss of trees in the meadow and the huge shadow it would cast over most of Oxford .
21 A French medic was climbing the grassy bank from the sunken road to look at the Officer as I got the prisoners out of the dug-out and back to their previous positions in the hollow .
22 Tim sat up all night once picking the raisins out of the muesli to spoil her breakfast .
23 Will he ensure that next week the Secretary of State for Scotland comes to the House and rejects the proposals out of hand ?
24 If that is a benefit short of trust status , why is it necessary to force through trust status while encouraging local hospital management and in so doing to bring the assets , the buildings and the personnel out of local health service management ?
25 well they have erm people from salons come in to try the products out in the if you go and
26 The general public was to be able to use the royal posts on certain of the roads out of London ; there were to be fixed rates of postage ( to defray the cost of salaried postmasters ) ; and horse posts ( which were to travel at the rate of 120 miles in twenty-four hours ) were substituted for foot posts ( which travelled at the rate of 16 or 18 miles a day ) .
27 Admittedly at this distance the idea appears fanciful and even ludicrous ; and no doubt if an enemy landing or landings had taken place , the roads out of London would have been jammed .
28 Yes , yes , yeah , but they did have civilians working there but I do n't know where they used to ferry the bombs out to but I do believe they used to carry detonators and everything down there you know .
29 Mr Brown controls the operations out of London . ’
30 The properties of the state so formed are related in a probabilistic way to the properties of the states out of which it is composed [ the photon has a chance unc a of transmission ( which is a certainty for polarisation along y ) and a chance cos ' a of not being transmitted ( which is a certainty for polarisation along x ) ] This is what is meant by the superposition principle : that states can be combined in this way with a probability interpretation of the result .
  Next page