Example sentences of "[adv] [to-vb] out [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She let the dress fall , pushing him away gently to slip out of tiny white satin briefs .
2 Too many studios had been built in Britain during the production boom and , at a time when filmmakers were anyway keener than they had been hitherto to get out among ordinary people , they found they were no longer constrained by anxious accountants determined to maximize the use of studio space .
3 This mismatch led to our including clear , key-by-key sequences in the notes and a resolution not to go out on CDL trials before reaching the stage of adequate documentation , as time is too valuable .
4 I used not to go out at all if there were any around .
5 The matches are designed not to blow out in strong winds or when immersed in water .
6 Or maybe Roecastle was just to warn out after all those punnishing reserve games ? ? ! ! ? ?
7 ‘ There is a lot more to come out about this flight . ’
8 We had undertaken to collect birds and mammals for the Natural History Museum in London and we soon collected several specimens of blue-winged goose near the Sandfords ' farm ; the museum authorities had asked us specially to look out for this bird since they only had one specimen , collected in 1868 during Napier 's Magdala expedition .
9 John Mortimer ( Mail on Sunday ) certainly took his time getting to the book , and when he got there he was cliché-ridden enough and bland enough even to stand out from that bland and cliché-ridden paper : ‘ This is an important book which makes us face the fact that genius does n't go with happiness , or blandly acceptable opinions .
10 Many people seem simply to grow out of heavy drug use , rather as many young drinkers mature out of heavy drinking .
11 I suddenly wanted very badly to get out of that room .
12 Large sections of the community , especially the blacks in the urban ghettos , young unemployed in urban areas of the north , and a considerable swathe of the people of Scotland , seemed almost to contract out from traditional forms of participation and civic involvement .
13 He said , ‘ we are just at the end of the recession and we are about to come out on some sort of curve ’ .
14 it 's just about to come out in three weeks time
15 In July 1988 an independent trust was set up to advise schools on how to opt out of local authority control .
16 It had been announced on Feb. 4 that food supplies in Russia stood at a critical level , with stocks about to run out within 20-40 days .
17 On the other hand , there 's no reason why you can not make material gains , particularly if you follow the suggestions earlier to break out of old patterns and courageously go forth into new and uncertain territory .
18 How to get out of that windowless room ,
19 From the Chief Constable … to the bobby on the beat … the men and women responsible for policing Swindon fear their jobs are about to change out of all recognition .
20 A war is about to break out between rival radio stations , battling for the ears of half a million listeners .
21 They said a , a normal person living on their own is only entitled to thirty nine pound sixty a week and that 's what I 've got in that book , but I do n't think they realise that I I 'm on me own and I 've got a gas , electricity and everything else to pay out of that
22 It is a good idea actually to write out in simple words the points that need to be made .
  Next page