Example sentences of "[vb past] out by the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This resolution was offered as a substitute for that reported out by the Budget Committee , and if accepted would give the president virtually all the cuts he had asked for .
2 While Mexico 's political weakness was excused and its economy helped out by the US , Brazil 's relationship with Washington steadily deteriorated and its policies came under American attack .
3 The third time I heard this trail ( as they are called ) , I dashed off a quick letter about my coffin difficulties , asking , at the same time , that if the producer considered my problem worth airing , could I be provided with a tape-recorder so I could get some of the more pompous prevarications dished out by the trade on permanent record ?
4 Research has markedly redressed the unfounded and ill-wishing treatment of it dished out by the zealots seeking to bring about the hardened approach to poverty eventually enacted in the harsh workhouse-based act of 1834 .
5 The agenda spelt out by the Treaty on European Union would lead to the eventual transformation of the Community into a single unitary state .
6 His music is the kind of accessible and easy listening fare churned out by the likes of Michael Bolton and Lionel Richie , who have both shifted considerable numbers of discs in European markets .
7 And with the advent of television , the cinema chains virtually abandoned the B-movies overnight ; it was shattering for the younger actors and writers who cut their teeth on the second-string movies churned out by the studios .
8 I thought we 're gon na so we came out of Paul 's place , behind Belmont Parade , up past the ponds there and that 's and I 'm knackered , I 'm going up river , had no you start at the bottom of Belmont Parade , up those ponds up to the traffic lights where you change buses , that 's all up hill and it 's slow , and you 've just started and you 're not warm and it 's like running out of here , running up that hill there , now you could run up that hill if you got , if you had sort of round a couple of times round nice , no one so more ready to go , you 'd run up there , you come out of here , run down here , not warm , feel you get , well I come out of there and , and you get , you go up past that set of traffic lights , you go up and you 're still struggling past The Bull , that 's still up hill , you get to the , just round that bend and it starts dropping down , and it 's a gradual drop down , below the roundabout and the next roundabout 's pretty level there , not too bad a roundabout , right the way across to Scades Hill , went down Scades Hill , right the way down to Alton , bottom of Alton high street , came out by the toilets at White Hart to High Street , up to house .
9 Each valve or combination of valves , therefore , produces not a single note but a whole series of possible notes , the one required at any moment being selected and coaxed out by the player , who must therefore ‘ feel ’ the required note before he actually produces it .
10 With all sense of distance blotted out by the night , their car slapped over the deserted tarmac .
11 Unable to pay the ten shillings fine placed against him — a trifling sum , of course , compared with that paid out by the Cremorne merry-makers after their destructive binge — Alfred Berry was sentenced to seven days in the House of Correction .
12 Therefore , for a child , compare the net interest rate paid out by the banks and building societies with the gross rate paid by others , notably National Savings products .
13 Therefore , for a child , compare the net interest rate paid out by the banks and building societies with the gross rate paid by others , notably National Savings products .
14 Therefore , for a child , compare the net interest rate paid out by the banks and building societies with the gross rate paid by others , notably National Savings products .
15 When the level of carbon dioxide breathed out by the bees gets high in some part of the nest , groups of several hundred workers start vigorously fanning with their wings , so circulating the air around the combs and levelling out any imbalances .
16 But a very tiny proportion will germinate , either because they are washed from the tree by rain , brushed out by the actions of wild creatures or even because they have not been fertilised .
17 She heard a shrill , penetrating whistle of a bird and trying to follow George 's pointing finger , she caught a glimpse of brilliant blue-green plumage , with an orangey breast , as the bird flashed down into a deeper pool scooped out by the stream .
18 ‘ And how do we do that with radios and telephone knocked out by the storm ? ’
19 We were all of us outcasts ; we were all of us flung out by the Lords of Tara , who were jealous of their lineage and protective of their inheritance .
20 It is sometimes said that the public roads laid out by the enclosure commissioners followed the lines of the medieval footpaths and bridle paths between the villages , paths that had been trodden out first in Anglo-Saxon times .
21 Good starting points are the many waymarked trails laid out by the Forestry Commission .
22 We were not starved of new westerns in that era when great old stars were playing aged gunfighters and movie squabbled with movie on the ideological terrain laid out by the war in Vietnam .
23 It is not , indeed , ruled out by the logic of the naturalistic fallacy that degree of goodness and degree of pleasurableness might coincide , it is just that once one is free of the fallacy one will no longer see any reason to hold this .
24 The trumpets and trombones are , as we have said , ruled out by the nature of the passage , but not so the horns .
25 Bobbing under the sheer cliffs , we passed through the Azure Window , a massive cliff-arch carved out by the sea and weather .
26 Under a timetable worked out by the country 's Environmental Protection Administration , consumption will be cut by 30 per cent of the 1986 level of 10,159 tons by 1992 , by 50 per cent in 1993 , 80 per cent in 1994 and 85 per cent in 1995 .
27 The new economic deal , worked out by the Deputy Prime Minister , Mr Leszek Balcerowicz , aims to expand the private sector in trade and industry , reform banking and financial systems and introduce the internal convertibility of the Polish currency , the zloty .
28 They may also show inappropriate behaviour , which should be treated by a behaviour modification programme worked out by the therapist and the psychologist .
29 On the same day , in order to allow a rescue operation , the Dáil approved measures temporarily protecting the company from its creditors and in late January 1991 the Dublin High Court approved a rescue package worked out by the group 's creditors to restructure its debt , which had by then reached I£512 million .
30 Under the nationwide plan to control water pollution adopted by Congress and worked out by the EPA , the states were obliged to adopt standards for 105 pollutants by February 1990 .
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