Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] out for the " in BNC.

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31 ‘ So things worked out for the best , I suppose , ’ Maggie said carefully .
32 One of the most common mistakes is beginning foreplay after the lights go out for the night .
33 THE PRINCESS of Wales last night spoke out for the first time about the ‘ untrue and hurtful ’ allegations about friction between her , and the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh .
34 Figures they gave us from surveys carried out for the Inter-Bank Research Organisation by the British Market Research Bureau confirmed this , but showed that people in social classes A , B and C1 are still twice as likely to have a bank account as people in social classes D and E , and that the higher someone 's income the greater is the likelihood of their having a bank account .
35 ‘ Strangely , things work out for the best , ’ she whispered .
36 The bells rang out for the first time just a day after they arrived back at the church .
37 They therefore wanted information items to spell out for the workers what would and would not be appropriate action to take .
38 As a result of the rebellion in 1745 , there was no election in the burgh of Montrose , and indeed there may well have been no elections in a number of other burghs , but Montrose stands out for the following reason .
39 Hundreds of people turned out for the funeral of the PC Patrick Dunne , who was shot dead on duty in South London .
40 They 're asking people to look out for the substances which were in a large grey plastic box .
41 But Jodi , a Rhodes scholar , will get her chance later this month , when she becomes the first woman to turn out for the men in the annual varsity match against Cambridge .
42 His decision was taken , and the orders sent out for the triple muster , yet even after news from the northern border confirmed only too clearly that Scotland intended to take a full part in the harrying of his realm , he was slow to move .
43 For several weeks Iranian media have been exhorting people to turn out for the demonstration .
44 When people go out for the night they like to come away with being entertained .
45 I 'd seen Chola and Mina setting out for the forest in the early morning , and three times during the day I 'd watched them coming back , stooped over and staggering under the weight of the enormous loads that spread across their backs , stretching three times broader than their shoulders and several feet above their heads .
46 Chola and Mina set out for the fields to continue the millet harvest , and Kalchu fetched the flat wooden spade and began beating down the mud to repair the leaking roof .
47 Soon afterwards Chola and Mina set out for the hills to gather grass .
48 Jazz reached out for the photograph and held it , examining it closely .
49 Holmes went out for the morning , but he came back at lunch-time .
50 ‘ I could ask him and Tim and you , and make my mum go out for the evening . ’
51 Signs , know your traffic signs , right , signals , give signal , give signals if they would help or warn other road users watch out for the signals of other drivers and motor cyclists or pedal cyclists and take necessary action from them .
52 Entire villages turned out for the spectacle and in Györ , the Bishop himself headed the assembled burghers .
53 I am much , much more concerned about her voice lasting out for the evening .
54 You watched the watched the shysters watched out for the shysters .
55 It was of a man reaching out for the moon , crying ‘ I want , I want . ’
56 Jean-Claude had all the music worked out for the ‘ Chansons ’ , there was nothing to worry about there , and something good to come home to .
57 They usually say to the old love about the new , ‘ I love you but am in love with her , ’ meaning that their nature is divided : their protective and uxorious souls reach out for the old love : their sexuality towards the new .
58 However , since the company itself can only act through human agents , a transaction carried out for the benefit of the company , will mean that those acting for it will be liable under the CSA 1985 .
59 We compared the incidence in the study areas with national data using the following sources : for childhood cancer , data from the National Registry of Childhood Tumours for 1969–87 ; for young people aged 15–24 , cancer registration statistics for England and Wales for 1971–86 , though these data were not subjected to the review processes carried out for the specialist registries ; for leukaemias and lymphomas in those aged 25–74 , data from the data collection study covering about one third of the population of England and Wales .
60 I want them sheds cleared out cos I want to get that garden sorted out for the summer
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