Example sentences of "[vb pp] out [prep] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 Commercial users of grain such as brewers of beer or vinegar or producers of starch were also picked out from time to time .
2 The studies are being carried out with reference to explanations for criminal acts and educational outcomes and are being explored in an inter-group context .
3 A great deal of research has been carried out with respect to the effects of ageing on physical and mental capacities .
4 In a pilot scheme carried out from September to November last year , the Japan fisheries Information Centre combined data from the US NOAA-7 satellite with information from its usual sources to draw up charts predicting the whereabouts of fish .
5 This study was carried out from March to December 1989 at the Kenyatta National Hospital , which is the only free public hospital in Nairobi , a city of 1.28 million residents .
6 At Esgair Moel Woollen Mill all the processes of woollen manufacture are carried out from fleece to flannel
7 The final area of regulation is through Recognised Investment Exchanges ( RIEs ) and Recognised Clearing Houses ( RCHs ) , through which securities transactions are carried out in order to be able to monitor investor protection more effectively .
8 The massive amount of activity by developer builders after the mid-1960s , which continues to this day , can not be described as unplanned , given that it was carried out in relation to land-use planning and the provision of infrastructure .
9 Although a great deal of work has been done in the historical demography of the developed world relatively little research has been carried out in relation to the corresponding ( i.e. pre-demographic transition ) period in the Third World .
10 Consideration should be given to ensuring that the staff assigned to the engagement are not involved in other work carried out in relation to either the purchaser or the target .
11 Bonnie ( Faye Dunaway ) had one leg strapped out of sight to the gear lever so that she could slump right over without actually falling out of the car .
12 A stunning collection of more than twelve million photographs recording some of the most famous events in history has been moved out of London to a new home here in the Central South Region .
13 She was referring to the illness which put him in hospital last year before he was moved out of Pollsmoor to his present quarters , formerly a prison warden 's home .
14 A few months ago , the couple moved out of town to a more rural environment .
15 Wallace saw the great northern continents of Eurasia and North America as the chief focus of progressive evolution from which higher types had radiated out from time to time .
16 Pandora , the first woman of Greek myth — as described by Hesiod — is made out of earth ; at Zeus 's command she was fashioned out of clay to be the instrument of divine retribution .
17 At least they were n't specifically sarky about the Liverpool connection which , as well as providing music and lyrics , also helped out with advice to the islanders on how to gamble with their fortune .
18 Skew or corner chisels have the edge angled out of square to the shank .
19 Now ranked at the top of the Indie band scene , they have sold out in hours to 25,000 in their home town .
20 The amount of money forked out in subsidies to loss-making state enterprises was 57 billion yuan .
21 Again the films , Decalogues I , IX , and X ( the first television versions to be screened ) , played out of competition to capacity attendance at the small Andre Bazin cinema .
22 Take the kid to the big stores and they 'd be rigged out from top to bottom — all stamped PACA .
23 It sailed in a great arc , hung poised for a fraction of a second , then plunged out of sight to the sea .
24 Furthermore , as Tony Prosser has recently pointed out with reference to the Child Poverty Action Group 's ( CFAG 's ) social welfare test cases , there is always the danger that ‘ successful test cases which threaten established policy , especially by increasing expenditure , will meet with quick nullification by legislative or administrative action ’ ( Prosser , 1983 , p. 74 ) .
25 My hon. Friend , who has been courteous and kind in meeting delegations led by me and by other hon. Members to discuss the problem , has pointed out from time to time that the scheme is the responsibility of the county council .
26 As it is , huge tracks of land are being unreasonably placed out of bounds to the landowners as well as ourselves by this odious , creeping 1979 menace to freedom .
27 However , in our many interviews with teachers and heads in individual schools , this generalized view was sometimes fleshed out by reference to specific instances and frustrations , of which the most common were the following : the difficulty of obtaining vital information ; the persistent unavailability of individuals who possessed such information ; the lack of departmental awareness about who was responsible for what ; the classic ‘ doctor 's receptionist ’ tendency among clerical staff to prevent heads from gaining access to advisory staff and other officers ; the Byzantine complexity of the departmental arrangements at Merrion House ; the lack of reciprocity in information flow : schools felt that Merrion House tended to bombard them with directives and requests , many of them urgent , yet was unwilling to reciprocate by supplying the schools with what they , often equally urgently , required ; and the failure of Merrion House officers and staff to answer letters .
28 In the interests of discretion — Leo was always discreet — they had driven out of London to Faringdon .
29 I would have to be smuggled out of England to our family in the Argentine .
30 By the time Wordsworth finally set out from Bristol to Racedown in the autumn of 1795 , he had , in the words of The Prelude , ‘ Yielded up moral questions in despair ’ .
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