Example sentences of "[verb] out [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | The lifters were tested three weeks ago and were booted out of the Olympics for taking Clenbuterol . |
2 | He should have been booted out of the Olympics and told to race at a more apt venue . |
3 | A mediator from the Catholic church had threatened to pull out of the talks , blaming both sides for intransigence . |
4 | Hornby loco we had those things you used to pull out of the cabs and they could go |
5 | Always remember , before you lean to your side , to pull out of the hips . |
6 | This enabled the banks to pull out on the grounds that involvement was not commercially justifiable . |
7 | Water oozed out of the walls and as each night wore on , the heat distilled a fetid and poisonous atmosphere . |
8 | These sticks would be twisted round until the bag was tightly pressed and the essential oil oozed out of the petals . |
9 | Gutsy Slatefield Magic ( 9.55 ) scorched out of the boxes four days ago and another fast exit will enable her to complete a quick double . |
10 | He had tried to sleep , but the horrific apparitions surfaced out of the recesses of his unconscious and frightened him . |
11 | They 're a bit cold when you 're walking out on the streets . |
12 | Walking out of the Ladies , I suddenly saw Mum 's face in front of me like I saw it in the dream — sinking , drowning in bubbling mud — trying to spit the oozing slime out of her lipsticked mouth but the more she spat it out the more slithered in … |
13 | Stephen nudged Christina , pointing to a couple walking out of the customs hall at Grantley Adams Airport . |
14 | However , printed opaques are still walking out of the shops this Christmas . ’ |
15 | A man from the audience is walking out among the dancers . |
16 | Suddenly , two girls fall laughing out of the Ladies into the narrow corridor . |
17 | Such initiatives petered out in the decades after the war ; indeed , it has only been since the mid 1980s that new attempts have been made , in Nell 's words , ‘ to regain the higher ground ’ , re-establishing the Underground as an influential patron of public art as well as improving the passenger environment . |
18 | We passed little shops hollowed out of the walls , selling henna , mint , aromatic seeds . |
19 | Networking out through the families and friends of Libyans he knew , talking to people in their homes , in coffee shops , in the markets and on the streets , Coleman met no one prepared to acknowledge even the smallest justification for the American action . |
20 | Here the blaze had started , killing Dame Frances whilst the rest of the nuns , given some warning , had managed to jump out of the windows or find their way down the outside stairs . |
21 | I would suppose it was shortly after four o'clock that I left the guest house and ventured out into the streets of Salisbury . |
22 | As Tiguary announced the plan to the assembled chiefs , Dulé could see the scene in his mind 's eye : the fire licking up one mast , then leaping in the rigging to the other , snaking through the spars , then falling in sparks , and setting the decks to smouldering while sleepy men sloshed water about with the balers , yelling orders to one another , until , when the flames had lit up all the timbers and the ship blazed in a transparent lattice of spars and ribs , her defenders would fling themselves into the sea and the warriors would swoop out of the shallows and fall on them : it would be as easy as catching fish . |
23 | This convention , so standard in the comedies that it escapes notice ( especially in modern theatre-productions , where it is very rare to be able to hear any difference between prose and verse ) , stands out in the tragedies , where the clown 's reduction of the medium imposes an often uneasy mood of relaxation or verbal indulgence , outside the time of the tragic action , frustrating its rhythm . |
24 | , John ( fl. 1649 ) , radical pamphleteer , stands out among the polemicists of the civil war period as an advanced thinker on constitutional law and theory with a talent for vivid prose . |
25 | What the hon. Gentleman is spelling out about the proposals is an elaborate , but nonsensical , theory . |
26 | He was a radical and five times the Mayor of Bedford , remaining on the council until 1892 , when he was voted out by the Conservatives ( who expressed personal regret ) . |
27 | Len 's mop of unruly fair hair always made him stand out in a crowded goalmouth but , even over 30 years later , he continues to stand out in the memories of Palace fans who saw him play for our club . |
28 | You 're not overtaking again ? ’ he protested , as she drew out beyond a cattle lorry . |
29 | When they reach the base of the cliff they leap out of the waves , scrabbling for a foothold and not stopping until they are well out of reach of the sea . |
30 | Carol and Gillian peered out of the windows . |