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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A customer could , therefore , ring round the booths seeking preliminary quotes , before going through the form of putting two traders out into the pit to effect the execution .
2 Try and explain it in terms of say let's get all these kids out into the school yard ,
3 Not so long ago , a haulage company would send its drivers out into the world with few opportunities to communicate with then until they returned .
4 Children will enjoy seeing the chaos as Henry leads all the young animals out into the forest , where it takes the farmer a long time to catch them .
5 Heating the water , well it heated if you 'd the fire on it heated the water and then you 'd take a couple of buckets out into the bath , plug a couple of buckets in .
6 She carried the empty plates out into the kitchen .
7 It was thought that Green took his large prepared copper plates out into the landscape and worked on them in front of the actual view , but when one looks at a print of a recognisable location the image is not reversed as would have been the case if a direct drawing onto the plate had been made from nature .
8 bring emotions out into the open ;
9 And for more than a mile they threaded their way around the standing pools that reached from the verges out into the drying roadway .
10 Tonight , in a rare moment of good judgement , he had hired a big band whose music would not drive his older guests out into the night .
11 he had gone down without a sound — and by the time he had woken up , his ship had been two days out into the Channel .
12 Some boys were bringing battered wooden buckets up from the well and the occasional housewife emptied the slops from the night jars out into the middle of the street .
13 Erm I w we suggest that while you 're having your coffee and refreshments if you can push some of the chairs back get those rails out into the middle there and you can have a look .
14 His arrival in Bond Street with chips of frozen snow still clinging to his person recalled that epic picture of polar heroism , ‘ A very gallant gentleman ’ , in which Captain Oates staggers out into the blizzard
15 His arrival in Bond Street with chips of frozen snow still clinging to his person recalled that epic picture of polar heroism , ‘ A very gallant gentleman ’ , in which Captain Oates staggers out into the blizzard .
16 But they were forced by bad weather to abandon their efforts to entice the marooned males out into the safety of deep water .
17 From the day they had all parted , diverging from Ecalpemos out into the world , he had never seen Adam again , but he knew all about him , knew for instance that he had become a partner in a company selling computers that called itself Verne-Smith-Duchini .
18 There were a couple of queues out into the street for toiletries .
19 ‘ You know how lawyers can drag things out into the years .
20 But , whatever the risk , she 'd much rather they brought things out into the open .
21 If you have sensed an undercurrent of discord and discontent running through your home you should take the initiative and drag things out into the open .
22 The most prevalent conspiracy theory in Iraq nowadays is that the West never wanted to get rid of Saddam and were actually on his side , helping him to flush his enemies out into the open .
23 This was a mistaken choice , because the Adour was actually a bad river , which kept on finding different ways out into the Atlantic and abandoning Bayonne altogether .
24 Well we 've fortunately been able to track them down to the waxes which er occur on land so what we 're seeing here is a , an input from the land carried on the dusts which are blown in the winds from the Sahara and other regions out into the Atlantic Ocean .
25 At last the Association of University Teachers ( AUT ) has brought the subject of staff-student sexual relations out into the open .
26 Winding down the window , he threw the bits out into the road .
27 Her conversations with the villagers as they shelled peanuts or sat around the fire , the interest she took in her pupils and their home backgrounds , her journeys out into the villages on teaching practice or corps activities had given her an appreciation of how the Africans thought and felt .
28 Amongst its advantages were a series of paid watchers who warned of approaching police , as well as numerous exits out into the warren of houses and warehouses that backed onto the Thames .
29 It 's a way of getting the children out into the community and teaching them how things operate
30 If that failed , a group of ships and boats would have to be used in an effort to drive the whales out into the Pentland Firth .
  Next page