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

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1 Fidelma stumped out of the room , deciding she had pressed her luck far enough and Timothy put his cup down , oddly disturbed .
2 The Christian Democrats got only 38.7% of the vote , against 45.1% four years ago , and are being booted out of the government for the first time since the state was founded 45 years ago .
3 And this was also the drug that caused British weightlifters Andrew Saxton and Andrew Davies to be booted out of the Barcelona Olympics .
4 And she has now been booted out of the Miss Italy contest after admitting that she underwent a sex-change operation last year .
5 The lifters were tested three weeks ago and were booted out of the Olympics for taking Clenbuterol .
6 He should have been booted out of the Olympics and told to race at a more apt venue .
7 The C&G was preceded out of the market by stockbrokers Kleinwort Grieveson and Hoare Govett .
8 Before Mrs Carroll could stop her Benny had galloped out of the shop and up the road towards the convent .
9 The Frenchman scrambled out of the river and stopped in front of her .
10 The children played a game , jumping into the deep green pools in the torrent from the big rocks under the star apple tree ; the cold of the water was so intense that Martha felt her body flush to its core with a spasm of heat ; even after she had scrambled out of the water her flesh still tingled from the shock .
11 Somebody called , ‘ Tea 's ready , ’ and the bathers scrambled out of the water and began drying themselves .
12 Three youths scrambled out of the car and ran off , leaving her dying in the road .
13 When all the limestone is dissolved out of the soil , more acid-loving species such as heather can become established .
14 The party appointments came after the leadership had authorised a statement formally apologising to the Czechoslovak people for leading the country into its latest crisis , before they were hustled out of the building because the cleaners wanted to go home .
15 Then in 1650 Vane was voted out of the position and Hutchinson succeeded him , holding it from the beginning of 1651 until the Restoration .
16 Capt. Garner was invalidated out of the Army and resumed his £200 per annum post as Club Secretary ( plus 10s. 0d. a month expenses ) .
17 The whine of psalms as squeezed out of the village choirboys .
18 We got squeezed out of the middle . ’
19 Wage inflation may well be the consequence of excess demand in the labour market , but it is also the means by which excess demand is eventually squeezed out of the system .
20 Gordon Brown , who has been squeezed out of the leadership race by Smith ( although he is said to be consoled by the fact that he is ten years younger and can wait a generation ) will have an important contribution to make .
21 When the train had emerged from the last tunnel on the Central Line between Stratford and Leyton , issuing with little more space to spare than toothpaste squeezed out of the nozzle of another kind of tube , somewhere past that point , though he was not sure yet where , he would climb out on to the roof of the car .
22 They hold debates on a wide variety of topics , some of which are squeezed out of the Commons programme through lack of time .
23 Any money for exhibitions or gallery refurbishment must be squeezed out of the £16.6 million or obtained by sponsorship , such as Samson 's for the forthcoming Korean galleries .
24 In 1974 it was squeezed out of the market by an Anglo-French-German enterprise , United Reprocessors .
25 Speculation that NCR 's own OLTP monitor Top End is likely to be squeezed out of the frame continues .
26 to capitalise the appropriate nominal amount of the new Ordinary Shares falling to be allotted pursuant to any elections made as aforesaid out of the amount standing to the credit of any reserve or fund ( including the profit and loss account , share premium account , capital redemption reserve or any other reserve ) , whether or not the same is available for distribution , as the directors may determine , to apply such sum in paying up in full such Ordinary Shares and to allot such Ordinary Shares to the shareholders of the company validly making such elections in accordance with their respective entitlements …
27 It is extraordinary how all that has been slung out of the window . ’
28 One year , I remember , he gave us half an hour on John McEnroe being slung out of the Men 's Singles .
29 Although she had rejected his dinner invitation , somehow he had come out of the scene the victor .
30 The lorry had not long come out of the tunnel when Tony suddenly clicked his tongue and applied the footbrake .
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