Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [verb] out the " in BNC.
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1 | They allow the economically strong to drive out the economically weak , and so generate monopoly power which robs workers and consumers of any effective economic control . |
2 | The less that gets out the better , whatever happens . ’ |
3 | He accomplished much while director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art , but today is apparently content to sit out the art world harbouring bitter memories of what might have been . |
4 | This is what Alexander experienced and is the very reason why it took him so long to sort out the problem with his voice . |
5 | Just tell me one last thing : as everyone is so busy wiping out the memory of the last 40 odd years , do you still want to keep your military headstone with its red star ? |
6 | The teacher may feel it is quicker and less tiring to carry out the task alone , or to ignore teaching opportunities . |
7 | And if we 're combining Morrissey and The Smiths ' covers , it 's only fair to point out the relative regularity with which three others have had their mugs used to shift copies . |
8 | The wind and rain on the little hill above Jaffa had ripped away at the paint but it was just possible to make out the words ‘ David Damiani ’ to the left of the broken wooden gate . |
9 | It was just possible to make out the 300 foot radio mast at the Davistow Airfield , an ex-military airfield well worth a visit , offering splendid moorland isolation and three concrete runways , the longest being 1550 metres . |
10 | Its Transitional Assistance Group was utterly inadequate to sort out the mess . |
11 | Women could also show their resentment of medical attitudes in popular anti-medical movements such as the contagious diseases agitation , the anti-vivisection league movement and the anti-compulsory vaccination struggle ; and feminists were easily able to point out the inadequacies of the myth of intrinsic female weakness . |
12 | Franco repeated the message of his 2 December letter when he said that he did not " see any advantage in change " and that if he were ever to delegate the leadership of the government , it would only be when he was no longer able to carry out the functions of that position as well as those of head of state . |
13 | It is scarcely necessary to point out the inadequacy and sexism of this picture — in which women 's own collective labour as gatherers or tenders of gardens is entirely overlooked — and its inapplicability to many of the cultures in which sex-exclusive linguistic markers are found . |
14 | The Adventurers were also to ensure that all levels were driven with only a slight gradient … " just sufficient to drain out the water " . |
15 | For this reason , it is not always possible to carry out the preferred size or type of investigation until certain data or resources become available . |
16 | It is almost always possible to find out the answers to basic questions about pay and conditions prior to the interview . |
17 | The reason why Hope should advocate Scott in particular , when a limited competition might give the ecclesiologically sounder Street the work , may have been that Scott was more likely to carry out the work successfully . |
18 | 10.5 Where the medical adviser considers that an employee is permanently unfit to carry out the duties of their post as a result of a violent incident at work , the Director of Social Work or nominated officer will discuss the matter with the employee concerned who may be accompanied by a trade union representative or some other person of the employee 's choice . |
19 | Given the expense of engineering reports it is all the more important to check out the expert 's fitness before commissioning the report . |
20 | ‘ If that is so then it is all the more important to find out the truth , ’ she said quietly . |
21 | Victorine wo n't know , she 's still busy dishing out the tea . |
22 | However , such concerns are beyond the scope of this article , and although we are not always able to separate out the different areas of linguistic interest in the characterisation of an individual in a dramatic text ( many individual character traits are receptive to a number of different linguistic approaches ) , the large number of insights into characterisation offered by discourse and pragmatic analysis indicates the large extent to which they may be used effectively by the student of dramatic texts . |
23 | If younger children want to feed your fish it 's usually best to measure out the correct amount for them . |
24 | We need somewhere safe to sit out the last two or three hours . ’ |
25 | It is , however , fairly easy to work out the energy as we bring in the charges from infinity one by one . |
26 | He threw himself almost sideways through the gap , rolling across the ground as much to put out the fire that was burning him as to lessen the momentum of the fall . |
27 | Since Japan and Britain scrapped their exchange controls in 1979 and remaining European controls disappeared during the late 1980s , investors have been far freer to seek out the best returns and to diversify their risks . |
28 | No matter what happens , under the Sale of Goods Act 1979 , computer suppliers have to meet the following conditions , otherwise they 're legally obliged to sort out the problem for you . |
29 | It said McGown had ‘ admitted that he was particularly interested to find out the sensitivity of black females to morphine when this narcotic is injected epidurally ’ . |
30 | It was even impossible to make out the enormous saw which had been the cause of the accident . |