Example sentences of "[conj] [vb -s] out [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 These schemes are regarded as models that should be extended to those whose disability is congenital or arises out of non-industrial disease or accident , for whom cover , though recently improved , is still only partial .
2 Do you think that there is even a sort of ‘ them and us ’ attitude , a feeling that the arts world is an ever open maw that cries out for endless sums of money and that the proper business of government is to resist ?
3 I have used dozens of makes of socks and the one that stands out above all the others is Thor-Lo .
4 Although it is the mood disturbance that stands out in affective psychosis , individuals who meet the criteria for either the ‘ unipolar ’ or the ‘ bipolar ’ form ( as they are sometimes called ) sometimes also show features reminiscent of schizophrenia , as we shall see for several of the subjects evaluated in this book .
5 The vision is to see a ministry established that reaches out to working girls .
6 It is the intention of the Secretary of State that a school that opts out of local authority control will not be allowed to change its character , similarly , a CTC must provide education for pupils of different abilities drawn mainly from the area in which the school is situated ( clause 105 subsection 2 ) .
7 Although at the local level we will be pursuing similar objectives , when it comes tot he wider national issues , it will be CPRW that speaks out for those who not only care about the Park , but also see it as a special part of a special country .
8 The red light that shines out from high up in the nave roofing indicates the position of a True Nail held in a glass reliquary at the centre of a crucifix .
9 There 's a kind of protective arrogance that comes out of that .
10 I think the only action that comes out of that is
11 Again , we see , that one of the very important truths that comes out of this is that people matter to God .
12 One share that comes out of this situation well is ‘ born-again' ICI at 690p .
13 Technology is , however , not a neutral ‘ thing ’ that arises out of disinterested scientific inquiry and which must then be accommodated , responded to , decided about in the society .
14 Still , a certain chiaroscuro grimness attached to their surreal exchange and cries out for some brainless , comic intervention .
15 The garden is pretty and looks out onto six acres of fields and a copse , and contains a tennis court which guests are welcome to use .
16 He follows a hill-track on his journey home , and looks out with startled pleasure when the coastal plain emerges below him .
17 Surely the way of transgressors is hard , and stands out in striking contrast to the ways of the Lord , which are experienced by those who walk therein to be pleasant and peaceful .
18 At this point the short version abandons the formal prayer frames and opens out into uninterrupted prose in which meditation on the enormity of what is happening to him " schop the sonne & al is , of al gode in " [ schop : created ; : anything ] ( p.85 ) carries the narrative to the point where Christ leaves Jerusalem ; then the meditation on the sorrow of Mary modulates into the account of the death of Christ , the major stages of which are marked by cries of remembrance but unpunctuated by any suggestions for Latin prayer .
19 The wasp strays in , eats a little honey , warms itself , tries to sting and travels out to some winter lair .
20 The gearbox in my 1973 Series III two and a quarter petrol is noisy and jumps out of third gear .
21 At ridges in the mid-oceans molten rock rises from the mantle below the crust and spreads out on either side to form new ocean floor .
22 It is believed to form in the central Labrador Sea by deep convection and spreads out at intermediate depths throughout most of the area north of 40°N .
23 The report favours the setting of attainment targets for children at 7 , 11 and 16 ( though with some publicly expressed reservations by Sir John Kingman himself about whether English can be ‘ mastered rung by rung ’ as in climbing a ladder ( Nash , 1988 ) ) , and spells out in some detail what these should be .
24 The relationship in 14 is more substantial , and arises out of eternal and ineluctable properties of triangles .
25 The means by which the cost of equity rises to offset exactly the use of cheaper debt is an arbitrage process and arises out of rational investors taking advantage of profitable opportunities if the market values companies according to factors other than their returns and the riskiness of the returns .
26 A spaceship goes into one black hole and comes out of another black hole on the other side of the Galaxy .
27 The last two sets of totals are added to the market or business total as appropriate and the new totals normalized , that is , presented as totals out of ten .
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