Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] out the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The hot rocks technique holds out the best hope for exploitation of geothermal energy .
2 The DJ fills out the early evening playing the most obvious indie-dance records , as he will finish the evening .
3 This Code of Practice sets out the basic practices employed by Midland Bank and its subsidiary companies in connection with their lending to personal customers in the United Kingdom .
4 Before detailing the two main components of LMS , this introductory chapter sets out the general framework of change .
5 JUST as spring brings out the first swallows , so it also motivates incoming club tours from one or more of the four home countries .
6 Grief brings out the best and the worst in all of us , I 've discovered .
7 Clanchy points out the anachronistic nature of the historians ' practice .
8 As the sun bakes out the last moisture from the mud , the mucus turns to parchment .
9 Green sets out the climatic conditions which give rise to the different degrees of ‘ air ’ .
10 The balance of this manifesto sets out the Liberal Democrat vision of the future : our long-term programme for government .
11 As well as the arrangements set out in paragraph 5 above , the Council 's Code of Practice on Employee Redeployment and Transfer sets out the detailed arrangements in connection with the transfer/redeployment of employees to other posts within the departments of the Council .
12 In seven tightly reasoned chapters , the author lays out the traditional interpretation of Gris as it was advanced by Apollinaire , Kahnweiler , Maurice Raynal , Zervos and other colleagues and critics who had known the artist and followed his development , and then proceeds to question their assumptions by looking more closely at the works themselves than any other scholar had previously done .
13 Parenthood brings out the worst , it seemed to him ; vicarious ambitions and frustrations raged all over the lawns and games fields of Croxford House on sports day .
14 Wind moves faster a little above the ground than it does close to the surface , so a breeze blowing across the top of the chimney sucks out the stale air within the tunnel and draws in fresh air through the lower entrance .
15 The vicar takes out the four balls and the waxman , Mr Tommy Temple , who has had the job since 1940 , carefully cuts away the wax and the names are read out .
16 Half a MURMUR in this COTTAGE sounds out the next stop .
17 The requirement for long-term robustness rules out the general use of dowels but the thought of complex , angled mortise and tenon joints is intimidating .
18 The problem is that soap washes out the natural skin oils which keep our skin supple and protect it from the ravages of the outside world .
19 ‘ I believe that the real difference between success and failure in a corporation can very often be traced to the question of how well the organisation brings out the great energies and talents of its people .
20 In a few places , as in the lower Neretva valley , a breach in the mountain wall permits a gulf of Mediterranean air to penetrate inland , but more commonly the unbroken barrier shuts out the ameliorating influences from the sea .
21 Far from being outdated , this old and broad conception of democracy holds out the only hope of compensating for the weaknesses of elected representative assemblies , dwarfed as they presently are by the bureaucratic and monopolistic structures of power which surround them .
22 This paper sets out the overall timetable for the information of all staff .
23 You hav to hav a bit of patience but once the train moves out the little victims are YOURS You put them in the lugage rack with molesworth 2 .
24 The sober vernacular architecture of the Third Republic is supplanted by the brutal international style ; sub-Brechtian theatre of alienation drives out indigenous French boulevard theatre ; the subsidy of rock and roll drives out the French popular chanson of Leclerc and Piaf .
25 ‘ A friend of mine , ’ he said , ‘ an American , sometimes travels on the top of a double-decker bus and in a very loud American voice points out the national monuments .
26 Company secretary tries out the latest conveniences at head office — Portaloo 's !
27 However , the British sex and race discrimination legislation spells out the equivalent concepts of direct and indirect discrimination .
28 ‘ This competition brings out the best and the worst in fashion students .
29 Photographs can be taken and scanned to produce pictures , but a video camera cuts out the photographic process and allows real-life images to be included in documents at no cost other than the initial outlay .
30 His view of the American situation follows out the formal consequences of earlier complaints by such writers as Nathanael West and Philip Roth , that the American novel can no longer keep up with contemporary reality .
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