Example sentences of "[adj] out of [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Why else should so many be high out of sight of the congregation , only sharply visible to us when using a telephoto lens ? |
2 | Yet another principle is that we are to be ‘ subject to one another out of reverence to Christ ’ ( Eph. 5.21 ) and this applies to each of us — men as well as women — whatever our particular calling in the Church may be . |
3 | Ephesians 5:21 tells us to ‘ Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ ’ and we feel that this is implemented when one partner listens respectfully to the other 's opinion and demonstrates consideration for it . |
4 | ‘ Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ ’ ( 5:21 ) . |
5 | Not only would a list of varieties make a book like this out of date in a short time , it would not help you either . |
6 | Charles I made her this out of guilt at the wrong done to her husband , Robert Dudley , son of Elizabeth I 's Earl of Leicester , whom a conspiracy had robbed of legitimacy and titles . |
7 | ‘ Do n't think I 'm doing this out of pity for you , ’ he called . |
8 | ‘ The lady prefers not to have us reveal any details , only to say that she is doing this out of love for her late husband , ’ he said . |
9 | But if the expenses in question are payable out of income to which the beneficiary has already become entitled , the expenses are not a proper deduction from the beneficiary 's total income , since they represent simply the mode in which he applies his income after he has become entitled to it . |
10 | Such a result would be so illogical , and so much out of tune with the extensive inquisitorial powers which are undeniably created by the Act , that Mr. Collins accepted that this could not be the meaning of section 2 . |
11 | Quite often something one had thought perfectly uncontroversial or even almost too insultingly obvious to include in one 's cooking instructions arouses readers to a pitch of rage and scorn which strikes one as very much out of proportion to the offence committed . |
12 | He told the court that he had been under ‘ emotional stress ’ at the time of the offence and that it was very much out of character for him to drink and then drive . |
13 | I was pretty much out of touch with LA musicians ; I 'm not a ‘ socialite ’ like Mick Fleetwood . |
14 | Mind you , I was pretty out of order at some of his famous parties , out-drinking George Brown and all those Labour ministers that he was courting at the time . ’ |
15 | Private parties are welcome out of hours by prior arrangement . |
16 | After the Croats , who had been halted around Bleiburg , had been disarmed ( they also included many civilians ) , they were force-marched out of Austria into Yugoslavia . |
17 | She was an attractive , red-haired woman , but she looked sad and always dressed in black out of respect for her dead husband . |
18 | Six years ago there were 6,211 out of work in the Darlington constituency , in January there were 4.365 . |
19 | He would be missed to a degree all out of proportion to his usefulness . |
20 | We are all out of date in relation to the challenges that we face in our work . |
21 | Anyway , the Hugheses are all out of order in the book . |
22 | However , the general principle of liability for the acts of others to which my hon. and learned Friend referred is not at all out of line with the Theft Act 1968 . |
23 | But it was enough to drive Labour out of power for what they were to call , in their turn , ‘ Thirteen Wasted Years ’ . |
24 | Angelica left the train on a stretcher in the dusk under bright station lights , her tomato head half covered by a blanket , and one lifeless hand , with red fingernails and sparkling rings , artistically drooping out of concealment on the side where the train 's passengers were able to look on with fascination . |
25 | This courtesy , tenderly performed , seemed right out of place to me , but it went down okay with Mrs Davis , who peered up at Fielding for quite a time before she said , |
26 | The train 's due out of Sion at nine tomorrow morning . |
27 | At the final turn into the tailwind , eight miles from the finish , Curry still led but only by 10 seconds , and from here on in Boone pulled ahead taking 1.29 out of Curry over the final miles . |
28 | Thus the regime of one-party states , nearly always achieved at considerable cost to those out of sympathy with the dominant party , will cause increasing resentment . |
29 | The co-pilot sits on a jump seat just aft of the pedestal , from where he operates all of the normal controls within reach , and indicates those out of reach to the instructor . |
30 | Pensioners who have given a lifetime 's service to the nation should not be asked to pay for a T V licence , and those out of work through no fault of their own , except for a government policy . |