Example sentences of "[vb pp] out into [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This means that the required colours can be squeezed out into the palette before painting . |
2 | He has come out into the road wearing slippers . |
3 | Miles had remained silent as they had paddled out into the water , though his heart was full of anger and grief . |
4 | Zen wound down the window and let his half-smoked cigarette be sucked out into the airstream . |
5 | A New York police spokesman said : ‘ An investigation is being carried out into the disappearance of the money . |
6 | The Morning Advertiser of 24 September reported on an in-depth survey that it had carried out into the effects of the guest beer provision . |
7 | A poll carried out into the reasons why people voted for the SDP candidate in the Warrington by-election of 1981 revealed that only 9 per cent did so because they supported SDP policy ; 8 per cent did so because they admired the well-known candidate ; and nearly 70 per cent voted for negative " reasons — the most frequently cited being their opposition to the extremism of the two established parties . |
8 | This chapter ends with a description of a study carried out into the origin , evolution , spellings and meaning of an individual surname . |
9 | It was held , appropriately , on the first day of Michaelmas when , in medieval times , pigs were traditionally turned out into the woods to fatten up on acorns . |
10 | Turned out into the street , most of them , every morning — Cara knew well — while their mothers went to the mill , a ragged band of infant desperadoes , all under the magic age of nine when they too could be put out to labour . |
11 | — For me — who at the age of 14 & a half , was turned out into the world , literally without a farthing — & with nought to look to for a living but his own exertions , you may easily suppose this a necessary prejudice — & indeed — the tardy paying of many of my subscribers — renders it but too difficult to procure food — & pay for publishing , at once . |
12 | Jetties , piers and hides have been built out into the reeds and these make ideal observation platforms . |
13 | Carry the felt out into the gutter . |
14 | I remember Otto mentioning that she entertained him there with Jean-Claude , and only later moved out into a room over the Café du Coin , to be nearer her ‘ young man ’ . |
15 | His own son , William 's son , who was called erm moved out into the country , married an heiress and became a gentleman with a coat of arms . |
16 | Chuck glanced around inquiringly at Jacques Devraux , who had moved out into the plain with his son and Flavia Sherman . |
17 | So , despite the loss of the temple , and its intricate system of worship and sacrifice , the hereditary priesthood had a role — a role which expanded , in fact , as the People themselves were thrust out into the world . |
18 | ‘ I was pushed out into the garden , but I stayed to watch through the window . |
19 | Havelock suggests three categories : the research and development and diffusion model , where an idea or practice conceived at the centre is fed out into the system ; the social interaction model , where change proceeds through formal and informal contact between groups ; and the problem solving model , where individuals are themselves involved in initiating , developing or modifying aspects of a programme at local level . |
20 | A malleable metal can be beaten into a sheet whereas a ductile metal can be drawn out into a wire . |
21 | ‘ Yes … and although he himself wanted the contemplative life , he was drawn out into the world and given the episcopate of Strathclyde , at Glasgow , when he was twenty-five years old . |
22 | During the Stephanian the main area of sedimentation has shifted out into the North Sea . |
23 | The interior of the farmhouse had been opened out into a reception office , though it still had the original stone floor and a pretty impressive fireplace in the middle of one wall . |
24 | Over the top , down the outside of the wheel , like being flung out into the night : dangling queasily in space then dropping like a brick . |
25 | He called out : ‘ I ca n't hold on any longer , ’ then fell straight on the ledge below , bounded out into the air , turning a somersault backwards , and pitching on to a grass projection some 30′ lower down … |
26 | When Vic opened the door , the squirrel bounded out into the garden after them , pausing to sniff the refreshed earth . |
27 | On other occasions , people are spewed out into the atmosphere and turn up hundreds of miles away . |
28 | He was dragged out into the light , the creature 's awful , Silk-resembled face , alive with the movement of the surface slime that quickened with expectation . |
29 | Before they had ventured out into the snowstorm , their mother had issued instructions : ‘ Pin up your skirts before you go out into that plother . ’ |
30 | Scattering earth was blasted out into the Rabbit Grounds , and the thudding noises rolled through the air . |