Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] out of [adj] " in BNC.

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1 To be blunt , you can be a sensible young woman and be escorted back to your family , or carried out of this wilderness in a sack .
2 New words are coined or borrowed or made out of combined parts from existing words ; the meanings of old words gradually shift .
3 Cards and boxes can either be bought from a stationer or made out of ordinary file paper and shoe boxes !
4 Still , what the song celebrates are ‘ hidden paths ’ , ‘ sudden tree[s] ’ , ‘ A new road on a secret gate ’ — things which seem to be or to lead out of this world .
5 The board will usually have responsibility for long-term strategic planning , for example concerning investment in new production facilities and products , merging or making a bid for another company , closing down existing plants or pulling out of unprofitable markets .
6 Now get on with your work or get out of this classroom .
7 And by last night , with the pound still falling below its permitted floor within the ERM , Mr Lamont was faced with two options — devalue or get out of Euro system .
8 As for the tabloids , additions to the range of publications have either been arm's-length extensions of existing publishing groups ( Today , 1986 — ) or born out of existing publishing houses ( Mail on Sunday , 1983 — , Star , 1978 ) .
9 They may have been on the street , or coming out of bed-and-breakfast lodgings .
10 There he was in all his splendour , gazing blithely out of society-column illustrations , going into or coming out of some swank nightspot or other , with a gorgeous girl on either arm .
11 The liability of the Corporation under this Section ( subject to Condition 5 of this Policy ) for all compensation payable in respect of or arising out of one occurrence or in respect of or arising out of all occurrences of a series consequent on or attributable to one source or original cause shall not exceed £1,000,000 .
12 The liability of the Corporation under this Section ( subject to Condition 5 of this Policy ) for all compensation payable in respect of or arising out of one occurrence or in respect of or arising out of all occurrences of a series consequent on or attributable to one source or original cause shall not exceed £1,000,000 .
13 Neither DW nor LD shall be not liable for any incidental or consequential damages , such as but not limited to , loss of anticipated profits or benefits resulting from the use of the Program or arising out of any breach of any warranty .
14 These schemes are regarded as models that should be extended to those whose disability is congenital or arises out of non-industrial disease or accident , for whom cover , though recently improved , is still only partial .
15 All of this leads Fred and Beth to worry that the fatal combination of an explosion of ‘ free time ’ with a booming global market in consumer goods and leisure industries will spell the death of their great utopian dream that they have cherished for so long — individual self-realization , mutuality in work and levelling out of global economic inequalities .
16 The ‘ traditional ’ settlement pattern in the area is varied and developed out of topographical constraint , patterns of land tenure and the exigencies of agriculture .
17 Now it is fallen upon and twisted and embellished out of all recognition .
18 Allen went across and peered out of one of the arrow-slits .
19 Had he woken up and looked out of one of the bedroom windows he would have seen his wife in the moonlight pulling desperately at the handle on a manhole cover .
20 And so though we have all sinned and that circle , that perfect purpose of God for you and for me has been warped and distorted out of all recognition , the potential that God had for you and for me , it 's been dis it seems to have been destroyed because of the warping and because of the impact of sin .
21 and came out of Long Beach we 'll miss it
22 The windscreen in front of the ‘ cabin' looks just like glass , but is in fact edible and made out of melted glacier mint — a clever and original idea you could adapt for other cakes , for example for windows .
23 ‘ You can just see the sea from the nursery , ’ explains Prue , ‘ and if you stand on the loo and look out of that little window you can see all those cloverleaf intersections you drove over on the way in .
24 Many are reacting by slimming their presence at shows drastically and pulling out of some altogether .
25 ‘ We will be keen to find a bit of room and get out of each other 's way . ’
26 So we 'll F Three and get out of that .
27 And you , you should get to your quarters , and get out of those clothes .
28 Go upstairs now and get out of those clothes .
29 Now , why do n't you just go upstairs like a good little girl and get out of those wet things ?
30 She could hear the regretful , gentle voice of Mother Francis telling her that life was never meant to be easy and that her best course was to work very hard now and get out of this place in record time .
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