Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [adv prt] of [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The latter relax annoyingly when not in use and tend to slide out of place .
2 Here a thriving brewing quarter had developed made up of alewife , innkeeper and alehouse brewers .
3 The ultimate in this line is the standing order , usually employed for annuals , which tend to go out of print very quickly once advance subscriptions are satisfied .
4 and if that inefficiency was causing the problem it 's not the result of the ownership er , there are inefficient private companies it 's just that inefficient private companies tend to go out of business , whereas inefficient public ones can be maintained with subsidization .
5 Marketing has developed out of sales .
6 While in many cases the application of a degree of common sense by the parties involved will indicate whether a restriction has fallen out of date or should continue to be respected , the better course is to keep the matter under regular review .
7 For this reason the golfball picture of the planet , with regular internal layers and smooth , uniform demarcation zones , has fallen out of favour as it has encouraged what are probably quite wrong estimates of temperatures at the core .
8 Kevlar ( DuPont ) has fallen out of favour for reasons of safety .
9 Once the market leader , Adidas has fallen out of favour with committed runners in recent years .
10 supervises change over of free-choice activities and then monitors maths group and two language groups ;
11 IBC is expected to pass out of Chapter 11 protection in May of this year , at which time the bank will be the sole holder of all outstanding IBC shares .
12 According to some estimates in late January , between 500,000 and 1,300,000 people were expected to come out of Iraq as refugees .
13 THE bottom has dropped out of morality , according to Lord Hailsham , who added that the ‘ last few months have been particularly difficult to bear . ’
14 He has dropped out of school because he is not interested in studies .
15 Certainly there are exceptions : ( 5 ) Alec 's shoes are real leather Intuition leaves no room for hesitation in taking this as an example of assignment , with leather used purely descriptively , rather than of equation , but the occurrence of the adjective real indicates that leather is nonetheless a noun ( this is no doubt partly possible because the adjective leathern has dropped out of use in modern English , and because leather itself is a mass noun able to occur without a preceding article ) .
16 There 's a lot of extremely good youth and community work has come out of Highfields youth and community centre in the past .
17 In this case , much of that scholarship has come out of France .
18 And more and more we 're hearing news of women working on a whole range of issues , including male violence in Africa , all parts of Africa , and the more I hear that , the more I realise that what has come out of England as revolutionary feminism is a parallel movement and does n't need to be sectarian at all in the way that maybe it 's been seen .
19 A convicted robber has come out of prison on parole … and walked straight into a job as a professional actor .
20 Frenchman Alain Prost has come out of retirement in a bid to steer it to a fourth world title next season .
21 A small amount of order has come out of disorder , and no mind planned it .
22 ALTHOUGH the temporary loss of the Grand Opera House was a major disaster , unbelievably , good has come out of evil in the shape of a production of West Side Story by Opera Northern Ireland that must surely be a landmark in local theatrical history .
23 In addition she was twice caught climbing out of windows and on one occasion got into her mother 's car and slashed the roof with a knife taken from the kitchen .
24 Before that can happen , El Al has to come out of receivership .
25 A second slab of beef has crawled out of bed and found his doorknob .
26 A WOMAN who stole thousands of pounds from a pub 's Christmas savings club has moved out of town to start a new life , a court heard yesterday .
27 For later blastocysts a preliminary incubation in the microfilament-disrupting drug cytochalasin D ( CCD , 0.5 μg/ml at 37 C for 10 min ) which causes rounding up of cells and loosening of intercellular adhesions can increase the accessibility for the trypsin/EDTA solution .
28 Now , looking out across the fertile fields he has cultivated out of bush , he says , ‘ Doris and I are going to give whatever experience we have to whoever rules the country tomorrow . ’
29 As I say , it needs cleaning up of graffiti and a little bit of adjustment and
30 Sixty million pounds this Council has got out of Europe .
  Next page