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

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1 Tense thriller concocted out of the most unpromising elements : three characters , two boats , and a lot of water .
2 The Ministry of Defence objected on three grounds : the increase in nuclear missiles available to the West was operationally unnecessary and would only add to the existing nuclear overkill ; mixed manning was a formula for military disaster ; and the cost of the British share would have to come out of the already overstretched Defence budget .
3 Of course , some sort of pattern can be teased out of the most disordered subject though it may take half a dozen attempts before a pictorial structure emerges ; such an unhurried approach is not always possible for the long distance traveller .
4 It sailed out of the horizontally opening window and fell on the bowler hat of a ratepayer on the street underneath .
5 While Toynbee Hall " expressed the spirit of Balliol " , Oxford House came out of the more " missionary " Keble College , Oxford .
6 Eventually I came out of the leeward shadows into ‘ the gleaming halls of morn ’ and , bliss at last , walked on firm snow instead of haggling through heather .
7 The floorboards , the great sweeping staircase , its balustrade and newels , were fashioned out of the most expensive materials .
8 One is that it displaces wage costs out of the more expensive core to the somewhat cheaper periphery ; another is that it leads to stable long-term relations with suppliers which open up multi-directional flows of information between the partners in the subcontracting network .
9 The warblers ' own young are turfed out of the deeply cupped reed nest by the cuckoo chick soon after it hatches and the foster parents find themselves feeding an enormous monster with a huge red gape and insatiable appetite — a monster which will eventually grow to three times their size .
10 The formation of the commercial basis of the kingdoms is not uniform and geography must have played an important part in the speed with which they evolved out of the less commercial exchanges of primitive valuables between earlier corporate descent groups and cohesive political units .
11 It looks as if it has come straight out of a childrens ’ story book , for it is round with cosy little windows peeping out of the almost conical thatched roof .
12 She looked out of the now sparkling window and heaved a deep sigh .
13 They all seemed pleased , as if I belonged ; but I knew I would leave them again before summer , would walk out of the brightly lit play , and go back to the shadows and solitude of fiction .
14 What are they ? " asked Joseph quickly , anxious not to be left out of the intriguingly adult discussion .
15 He had to decide what to do about the serious state of the Government 's own finances — the spiralling budget deficit estimated at £50 billion for next year — and he had to try to help the country to get out of the exceptionally severe recession which has bought both company failures and exceptionally high unemployment .
16 He had to decide what to do about the serious state of the Government 's own finances — the spiralling budget deficit estimated at £50 billion for next year — and he had to try to help the country to get out of the exceptionally severe recession which has bought both company failures and exceptionally high unemployment .
17 Today , Sartre 's voluntarism is to some extent returning to favour as the result of a desire to retrieve the categories of agency and the subject , which goes together with the wish to get out of the apparently totalizing systems of Adorno , Althusser or Foucault .
18 Cos if you ever squared up to one of these or anybody in the flats , people 'd just come out of the out of the woodwork .
19 Erm , so we 've got , resources are always going to be taken out of the most efficient sectors if we , if we use protectionism .
20 Enmity arising out of the often inordinate emphasis laid on sports by some teachers is quite commonplace amongst black kids ; much less so amongst whites .
21 He suggests that the sense of the aesthetic arises out of the extremely rapid and continuous focal comparisons of data made during perception .
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