Example sentences of "[to-vb] out into [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | On another occasion Joanne ( 4.6 ) used the All sorts to sort out into rows . |
2 | These er on when they look to be the cloisters of a cathedral , although , when you look through they seem to open out into street , so I 'm not quite sure exactly what sort of building it is . |
3 | By unscrewing a ribbed locking collar the blade is allowed to swivel out into position and is then locked into place by screwing up the collar . |
4 | It was as if she was all alone — a tiny speck on the ocean , surrounded by a galaxy that seemed to stretch out into infinity . |
5 | You could feel the earth shake as it changed down , ready to turn out into parkside . |
6 | At that time few attempts were made to measure the effectiveness of such activity , and advertising agencies tended to branch out into sales promotions with the aim of offering an all-inclusive package to their clients in an attempt to combat competition from the emerging sales promotion agencies . |
7 | He turned from Alina , trying to retch but with his clogged windpipe preventing even that ; he threw himself toward the doors , trying to get out into air , air that he could n't quite reach . |
8 | With 15 minutes gone Airdrie were able to break out into attack for the first time and Hearts ' experienced defenders looked oddly rattled , particularly when Coyle came close with a flashing cross-shot from the left . |
9 | He was to describe him as ‘ a man of dangerous temper , apt to break out into extravagances ’ . |
10 | Thacker , who had also been wounded , managed to bale out into St. Paul 's Bay . |
11 | When Malcolm James 's book Born of the Desert — the reminiscences of a doctor with the 1st S.A.S. in the Western Desert — appeared in 1945 , a reviewer wrote : ‘ All men have conscience , but it is given to only a few to have the selflessness to stride out into battle and , by themselves undertaking the combat that has to be done by someone , to satisfy its insistence … ’ |
12 | She was too plain , and too shy , to bring out into society ; but that , as Dinah told herself , was no reason for allowing the young woman to idle her days away in the Hampstead house . |