Example sentences of "[adv prt] of [art] way " in BNC.
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1 | It will not elbow anything else out of the way . |
2 | Not elbowing others out of the way . |
3 | She got the food well out of the way mid-afternoon , devised a tongue-teasing cocktail , and asked all the people she loved . |
4 | I saw one player push fans out of the way at the Australian Open this year . |
5 | I found it to be quiet , even when under pressure , and the hooked power pack means that it can be hung conveniently out of the way . |
6 | The ‘ tendentious ’ story would soon be out of the way , making possible a return to what Dostoevsky thought was much more important , the Life of a Great Sinner project . |
7 | Yesterday 's sudden departure followed what appeared to have been an almost total cave-in by East Germany , anxious to have the matter out of the way by the country 's fortieth anniversary on Saturday . |
8 | There was relief that the rise was out of the way and substantial enough to keep further advance at bay . |
9 | But ministerial aides said it was better to get the increase out of the way this week , rather than have it happen during the conference . |
10 | Obstacles which prevent young people from using their talents at home must be swept out of the way , he said . |
11 | Their whole game depends on getting the man on the ground out of the way , if necessary with the boot , if he is so unfortunate as to be between them and the ball . |
12 | Having declared London ‘ shabby and out of the way ’ , Hamnett has decamped to show in Paris , leaving a trail of controversy in her wake . |
13 | Less comforting for the chicks was her habit of scratching violently backwards with one foot after the other , which often sent the babies hurtling out of the way like fluffy ping-pong balls . |
14 | The whole hall is convulsed to see children elbowed out of the way while the adults take over skipping ropes and doubledutch , 1920s style , fills the screen . |
15 | We tried lots of rehearsal spaces but they were all a rip off and totally out of the way . |
16 | There is a connotation to leadership that needs perhaps getting out of the way . |
17 | I let off the snow hook , Rayo heads for the tree , Kaisa leaps out of the way , Sunniva follows her round and it 's back to knitting in seconds . |
18 | The thought came to Wexford that something very out of the way had happened . |
19 | With Jerome out of the way and all that money for themselves , she felt they would have a much happier relationship … |
20 | It was not scheduled until later that night , but since the ATO team are there they decide to get it out of the way . |
21 | The old crow selected the largest one and dragged it to safety , out of the way of a pair of young birds chasing them down . |
22 | ‘ In fact , no disconnection was made at the fuse end , and although at the other relay end the old wire was disconnected , it was not cut back as it should have been , nor was it secured out of the way of its previous contact . ’ |
23 | Oils rallied several pence now that the anticipated lower-earnings from BP and Shell are out of the way . |
24 | Lozano had claimed that the motorcycle was aimed at him , and that he had no time to leap out of the way . |
25 | Lozano had claimed that the motorcycle was aimed at him , and that he had no time to leap out of the way . |
26 | ‘ In a side street , not far from the burning Palace of Justice , yet out of the way , stood a man , sharply distinguished from the crowd , flailing his hands in the air and moaning over and over again : ‘ The files are burning ! |
27 | But David surprised me by saying , ‘ OK , now we 've got that out of the way , let's go and do the rest of the album ’ . |
28 | He glanced at Catherine but she had obviously noticed nothing out of the way . |
29 | Tim , I 'd like you to report on administrative matters first , to get that out of the way . ’ |
30 | The answer is partly that the vote in Rhineland-Palatinate , which lies just below Bonn , is now out of the way ; partly that he may regain some of his lost esteem in eastern Germany , where voters are heavily for Berlin ; but not least that Mr Kohl has almost always come back fighting after getting a slap in the face . |