Example sentences of "[prep] [adv prt] of the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | So you 're saying , there 's more chance of getting the blue out of out of the second , than there is of just |
2 | They recorded their new demos not under the blazing summary affluence of a Compass Point but in the rundown but equally effective ruins of Out Of The Blue , an eight-track studio in the rat-infested decay of Ancoats , Manchester . |
3 | And Mala had put on a figure-hugging neck-to-ankle suit of Luxipelt , which together with a whiskered and eared mask made her look like on of the slinkiest , most enticing Clovellyan felinoids I 'd ever seen . |
4 | Most importantly , it has shown what advances are possible given enthusiasm , goodwill and a full-time secretary paid for out of the Legal Aid Fund . |
5 | These items are usually paid for out of the petty cash . |
6 | We support the proposition that the provision of access beyond existing Rights of Way should be paid for out of the public purse . |
7 | The bill for the refurbishment will be paid for out of the government-backed Urban Programme . |
8 | What caused the accident remains a mystery , although a cut in on of the rear tyres was discovered over a week later , but according to Lotus is was impossible to be categoric as to the real cause . |
9 | A voice came from out of the dark depths of the cage to his right . |
10 | Then from out there where Slorne 's gaze had led him , from out of the dark moonlit sky , there came a distant calling of a name , a place , a power , and it was like a great presence he could only feel and not see , and it cast itself over him , and over his cage , and over the whole Zoo , and over more than that . |
11 | The organized youth movement can easily be identified as emerging from out of the economic and social crises commonly associated with the late Victorian period . |
12 | ‘ FROM OUT of the blue , 21-year-old Elvis Presley has rocketed on to the popular music scene with all the scorching fury of a meteor , ’ reckon the NME on May 11 , 1956 . |
13 | All too often , human beings showed a literally fatal attraction towards such poisonous powers and their sub-daemons ; as indeed perhaps people must , since those selfsame entities had agglutinated from out of the foul passions of once-living souls . |
14 | Now leaning forward from out of the flowery deckchair : ‘ You know he died in debt . |
15 | From out of the terrible confusion came a different voice , a gentle voice , a voice that understood . |
16 | It seems as though habitable mountains have grown up precipitously and cancerously from out of the ravaged landscape in defiance of gravity the leveller . |
17 | I tell you what I think , since you ask , since you dare to push your repulsive face at me , from out of the smooth paintwork of my heavily mortgaged heart . |
18 | He prised the carcass up from out of the wet , clinging turf and turned it over , examining it . |
19 | Ransom , the name finally arrived at , develops its own significance in the sequels to Out of the Silent Planet . |