Example sentences of "[to-vb] out on [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Watford is erm when you used to come out on the old
2 What you have going for you is the ability to withstand whatever is dished up and to come out on the winning side .
3 But the plan has foundered in the EC 's demand for a general liability clause , a feature that has proved difficult to sort out on an international level .
4 You know so you have to reach out on a daily basis for these gifts .
5 For an artist to travel is to set out on a visual adventure which may or may not end in fulfilment .
6 It had been so vivid it seemed real , yet had she really been idiot enough to set out on a rough sea in a mere dinghy ?
7 You are about to set out on an interesting and formative experience , something that is likely to have a major impact on your life .
8 In particular the post of Secretary has become vacant and we would love to hear from anyone who may be able to help out on a temporary or more regular basis … ( see page 23 ) .
9 Final addition is a button that electro-pneumatically locks the rear differential to help out on the serious off-road stuff .
10 Both he and Mickey Skinner have a limited number of appearances at Twickenham to look forward to and they will surely be anxious to go out on a high note .
11 This time bomb is ticking away , colleagues , and in about twenty years ' time , we 'll be back to where we were we 'll have a lot of people who 've got small pensions , based on their previous employment with a health authority or a local authority , British Gas or the electricity companies then they 've had to go out on the open market and they will be under-funded and have inadequate pension when they retire .
12 Already there was a small queue of young people at the café door , for this was Saturday night and the boys had put on their one-hundred-and-thirty-rouble English wool suits and the girls had fifty-rouble pointed shoes wrapped in a parcel , for they were far too valuable to wear out on the icy streets .
13 To travel through Ireland without visiting a pub would be to miss out on a huge chunk of Irish life .
14 We are left with the fun loving ( overgrown kids ) and the ‘ I am not going to miss out on the fun ’ brigade .
15 Companies cluster together anxious not to miss out on the latest developments and the growing pool of scientifically-skilled labour .
16 And they are refusing to pay out on the late flood of bets until the official inquiry is complete .
17 In the case of an indemnifier who is not a consumer , the question to be asked is whether , in the absence of the indemnity , the indemnitee would have been obliged at common law to compensate the indemnifier for the economic loss suffered as a result of having to pay out on the third party claim .
18 Those who know the children best can decide whether to splash out on a part-time assistant or a fancy computer .
19 Meanwhile , fashion pundits were speculating last night that although Anne is likely to splash out on a new outfit , she will be wearing an old hat when she walks up the aisle .
20 Although it can be very tempting to splash out on the first splendid specimen that catches your eye , you might be surprised at what you can find once you really start looking .
21 ‘ Fifty to win is a lot of money to lay out on an untried filly . ’
22 Unfortunately you find that no-one has ever bothered to produce the graphics before because they take too long to print out on the current office printer !
23 Queen Victoria went there for the first , very influential time in 1889 , though even before that the surprisingly large English community in Pau had begun to colonize it , to such an extent that by the 1870s not only did the Church of England have congregations in Biarritz but they were already schismatic and the Archbishop of Canterbury had to travel out on a pastoral visit to try and stifle the factionalism .
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