Example sentences of "[noun pl] [be] bring out " in BNC.
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1 | The Brackley blooms are brought out early with a little help from 400 watt lamps sunning them from January onwards . |
2 | When his bones were brought out of their air-conditioned home for me to glimpse , I was astonished at their lightness and frailty . |
3 | Only three miners were brought out alive . |
4 | Practising kung fu puts a person in touch with himself or herself ; his or her own failings are brought out into the open . |
5 | The connection between smuggling , parliamentary politics and the conduct of customs officials was brought out strongly in the election for Wigtown in 1761 , when that town was the returning burgh of a district of four towns , for the position of the customs officers of Wigtown was thought likely to topple the dominant interest of Lord Galloway and his son Lord Garlies . |
6 | At last the mattresses are brought out . |
7 | Shield-hung hurdles were brought out into the field , and bowmen and slingshot-throwers behind them began to shred the trees with a descending curtain of missiles . |
8 | Six weeks later , when the remaining bodies were brought out , militant miners , veterans of the 1819 miners strike had agitated successfully enough for Holmes to comment : ‘ Their great grief was disturbed by agitators and others to create distrust and confusion by acrimonious and malignant observation . ’ |
9 | The secret of both recipes is bringing out the natural fruit flavours — why not try them soon ? |
10 | Let us take instead one comparatively small piece of country , which contains every variety of road from the prehistoric trackway to the modern by-pass , so that the detailed differences are brought out : for the interest of an inquiry such as this , and one can not say it too often , lies in the detail of the subject . |
11 | Gradually this forced the Conservatives into ideas of planning and influencing the location of industry , special plans being brought out for Scotland and for the North-East of England . |
12 | In one particularly telling scene between Kathie and her mother Nell ( Brenda de Banzie ) , the issues of sexual relations between Black and White people , and ‘ mixed race ’ children are brought out into the open . |
13 | It tends to happen if too high a potency ( that is , too strong a potency ) is given , and the symptoms are brought out or exteriorized rather too quickly for the body to handle comfortably . |
14 | This sort of copy is at the same time description and interpretation , the salient points being brought out by the copyist , who gains greater understanding of a masterpiece by his work . |
15 | When these new factors are brought out by the informant the interviewer can then follow them up in more detail by a simple prompt , such as ‘ Tell me more about what happened when the old vicar died and this new man came who fell out with the schoolmaster . ’ |
16 | Maids hurried round with cups of hot posset , stable boys and ostlers shouted as horses were brought out , saddled and made ready to mount . |
17 | Two years later dozens of Green Goddess military fire engines were brought out of storage to cover the firemen 's strike . |
18 | Two years later dozens of Green Goddess military fire engines were brought out of storage to cover the firemen 's strike . |
19 | This sense that the holiness of God 's presence is incompatible with the presence of women is brought out in the story of the giving of the law at Sinai . |
20 | A new edition of these maps was brought out in 1801 . |
21 | this is erm , this is a bit like I went to an auction at erm Chesteny Street , and all the exhibits were brought out by hand , by , by the |
22 | Outside the kitchen door scullions were bringing out steaming chunks of bloody red meat to throw into huge casks of pickle and salt to preserve them . |
23 | The contrast between the two major opposing historical interpretations is brought out well by comparing two studies of urban Lancashire : Anderson 's ( 1971 ) study of Preston in the mid-nineteenth century based on documentary data , and the study of Roberts ( 1984 ) of Preston , Barrow and Lancaster in the period 1890–1940 , based on oral history . |