Example sentences of "[to-vb] out to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Captain Faulknor was still concerned about the ship 's speed and said to Jenking , ‘ that it would be better to stand out to sea for the night . ’
2 well you know what I 've done with mine erm , just temporarily , I 'm trying to find out to speaker position , eh ?
3 Ultra Network Technologies Inc , the pioneer of 800Mbps and up local area networking , has signed a letter of intent to sell out to Maple Grove , Minnesota-based Computer Network Technology Corp , which has agreed to pay about $1.88m in shares for the privately held firm .
4 This has been very clearly shown at Beachy Head where , between 1965 and 1976 a total of c. 70 Buzzards was recorded between 5 August and 27 October ; some were observed to depart out to sea .
5 Similarly organisations that find themselves in difficulty ; where the profits are not coming through , where there is pressure from shareholders for a significant improvement in profit performance ; here again , the chairman and the Board are likely to reach out to executive search consultants to find them new talent .
6 But it was beautiful for all that , Lindsey decided , leaning against a wall to stare out to sea .
7 The miles of wet , corrugated sand were alive with dancing light , sparkling , glittering : it almost blinded you to look out to sea .
8 Paige allowed her gaze to drift out to sea .
9 Thirdly , if you had refused , I would have told you I intended to point out to Kenamun that the door of the stall in which Merymose was found had been opened .
10 There were as many as twenty-four vessels in Table Bay , all anxiously waiting to put out to sea ; boats loaded with African fruits for the London Market were in a sad plight , as the extra time on board would not improve the fruit .
11 But nor did I want to go out to work .
12 When I first came my husband did not want me to go out to work .
13 There would be no need for her to go out to work .
14 If you happen to go out to work , a message like that from your boss would , I 'm sure , bring a broad smile to your face .
15 In general , this is probably because the pressure on boys and young men to go out to work is much greater .
16 When roles become more segregated , as they do after the birth of a baby , even when both parents continue to go out to work , people are less able to avoid their envy of the opposite sex and of the baby who receives so much care and attention .
17 If you 're poor , your women ca n't be secluded , they have to go out to work .
18 Thus the death of his father is not an event that impinges on a child only at one particular point : it may go on producing shock waves through its continuing effect on the mother , which in turn may bring about a different relationship with the child ; in addition there may be economic difficulties as a result of which the mother has to go out to work , a new home has to be found , and an altogether new lifestyle adopted .
19 I had to go out to work .
20 The government has failed to provide adequate day-care facilities for children to enable women to go out to work .
21 During the early twentieth century and increasingly during the inter-war years the ideology of motherhood was reinforced legislatively by the marriage bar , which was applied chiefly to professional women and which served firmly to delineate the world of married women from that of men at a time when it was becoming widely acceptable for single middle class girls and women to go out to work .
22 But no in those days if you had children er young children at any rate you , you , you never expected to go out to work at all .
23 She would have to go out to work , it appeared , to see him through college .
24 The crisis is hitting so hard that most of the people are unemployed , and you see children begging in the streets or forced to go out to work .
25 Well no , no I , I , I 'd got a cycle and er the money was very useful to us cos er my husband , he worked on the , on the top of at Parcel he could n't go down , they were n't allowed underneath er because he wore glasses , anyone wearing glasses they were n't allowed underground you see and they had to work on what they call on the surface , and of course the wages were n't , were n't much and er I was glad to go out to work and er and I , I eventually I had a cycle and I used to cycle to Squires and back you know , and erm it was , it was very very useful indeed the money I , I , I earned there .
26 Oh er of course they erm , they did n't believe in married women working and er they thought a married woman should be at home you see , well I had n't got any family then you see , until er after oh we 'd been married a number of years when we had , when I had my first baby and er and then I had the other one pretty quickly and er then I was glad to go out to work again when they were school age , they were n't left unattended at all er one , the elder one looked after the one , we did n't live , we lived in then but erm there was n't any pressure for me to stay at home , it was with my husband 's consent , because he knew it was helping out because rent man 's wages were n't very good then , and erm he er he finished , he finished at the pits you see and he got a job rent collecting , and he er he used to do miles he 'd cycle part of the way and then er he 'd perhaps leave his cycle somewhere and call back for it , but he used to do all the and all round there , there 's a place called and then er a lot of places er he used to do the old , is this , is this on , erm he used to do round , round the top there there were some slums there .
27 have a purpose to go out to work .
28 And so people had no other option but to go out to work .
29 But Grace would n't need them to go out to sea on the ebb tide .
30 ‘ It was a direct result of seeing the need for something different that could allow people to go out to sea no matter what the weather was like outside , that I went to see the lifeboat just over a year ago . ’
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