Example sentences of "[noun pl] go out [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 They inevitably knock on the door on the one evening of the month when you 're dolled up in your glad rags to go out on the town .
2 When our teenagers go out for the evening , most of them use something , if only occasionally , as a social prop .
3 I watched his shaking shoulders go out of the gate and disappear round the corner .
4 In South Africa , only mad dogs and security guards go out in the last white summer
5 Fierce Eyes went out into the storm and returned with the grandmother 's grizzled skull , the hair frozen into spikes which he broke off and cast on to the fire , where they sizzled , cooled , then flared .
6 ‘ Do n't let Dad hear for God 's sake , ’ she moaned quietly , as all her inhibitions went out of the window .
7 ‘ I used to love watching Lord Delamere 's chaps going out with the cattle carrying umbrellas .
8 William Shirer , whose CBS broadcasts went out from the Rundfunkhaus , noted in his diary that Goebbels 's Ministry of Propaganda thought the drawling nasal voice ‘ wholly unfit for broadcasting ’ .
9 The days of casual sex from encounters in bars and discos went out with the arrival of AIDS , at least as a way of life .
10 I see bands going out on the road with a dozen more people than they actually need .
11 It 's the Saturdays going out to the hospital , the smell of floor-wax and urine in the corridors , the helplessness , the moments of despair …
12 Ednyfed , the writs go out within the hour .
13 The CAB has become quite used to responding to emergencies , so when a bureau is alerted to an impending crisis and the clients are unlikely to be able to visit the bureau , the workers go out to the clients .
14 I watched a gradually widening circle of splashes go out from the centre of the explosion as the debris came back to earth .
15 Erm and on a Friday all the beds went out onto the grass outside the wards for the wards to be cleaned
16 Police inquiry desks in Darlington will be staffed by civilians rather than policemen , leaving more officers to go out on the beat , if the Chief Constable of County Durham gets his way .
17 And they sat in the car with the windows down in the freezing dawn and they watched the distant city lights going out under the dawn at five in the morning , they sat there for a full half hour , looking , and thinking how beautiful the city looked at this time and at this distance …
18 And seen gillies going out for the Stenness Hotel s with sailing boats , I 've seen eight leaving there in the morning I went to school .
19 If goods are sold and payment postponed until a later date , we still have ten pounds of value in goods going out of the business , and we have a debtor who represents ten pounds worth of debt owing to us .
20 For instance , if a business sells ten pounds worth of goods for cash , the goods go out of the business as sales and the cash comes into the business .
21 For example , if your love life is thriving you can manage to maintain your diet , but as soon as there is an upset , or things are not going to smoothly , then your dietary resolutions go out of the window ?
22 ‘ Our hearts go out to the other victims of this atrocity . ’
23 The lights went out during the two world wars and the austerity years which followed , so although this year is actually the 80th anniversary , it 's only the 60th display .
24 ‘ Good God , I thought those things went out with the ark .
25 So all those things went out of the window which makes life easier .
26 One of the most common mistakes is beginning foreplay after the lights go out for the night .
27 As the first group of pulses were directed to the satellite high above the Indian Ocean , mixed up with all the other transmissions going out to the Far East , they were snatched out of the ether by the NSA 's giant aerials at Morwenstow 60 miles up the coast to the east of Goonhilly , and compared with the watch lists of ‘ interesting ’ numbers on their computer memories .
28 The mowers went out into the little fields of wheat and oats , and the sheaves stood yellow in the stubble .
29 This lesson had been reinforced as far as the railways were concerned each spring from 1918 to 1920 , when urgent orders went out from the highest level to rehabilitate them in order to cope with the influx of vital foodstuffs and fuel to the towns .
30 Application forms went out with the February newsletter but if you did not receive one please contact Keith Barlow on 0602 856672 .
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