Example sentences of "to help out [art] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Had to help out a lot at home , did you ? ’ he asked unsympathetically . |
2 | RVS was a master printer and an amateur pianist , the latter facility enabling him to help out a friend who was touring the Glasgow districts before the First World War with a projector and a bag full of short silent films . |
3 | Two years ago , Mr Shiratori left the firm , after agreeing to help out an old friend who was ill by becoming CEO of IONA International , a family-run cosmetics business . |
4 | Towards the end of the last century a Maharajah decided to help out an English village which had no regular water supply . |
5 | A long-winded man for such a recluse , he devised an 800-word standard apology for not being able to help out the writers of the 3,000 begging letters he received monthly . |
6 | Tom Frost stepped down as chief executive of National Westminster Bank to help out the latest Department of Trade inquiry into the Blue Arrow affair . |
7 | There are also plans for the commissariat to help out the large but troubled medical electronics firm Compangnie Générale de Radiologie . |
8 | Yesterday , the new leader of the MSF , Roger Lyons , said Mr Gill had been asked to hand back part of his nest egg to help out the union during the recession . |
9 | Without a lemon to squeeze on to fried or grilled fish , no lemon juice to sharpen the flatness of the dried pulses — the red lentils , the split peas — which in those days loomed so largely in our daily diet , no lemon juice to help out the stringy ewe-mutton and the ancient boiling fowls of the time , no lemon juice for pancakes , no peel to grate into cake mixtures and puddings , we felt frustrated every time we opened a cookery book or picked up a mixing bowl . |
10 | From time to time the main Party had to intervene to help out the youngsters or to curb their youthful enthusiasms . |
11 | The trouble with Caitlin was he still behaved as if it was the old days , when everyone wanted to help out the police . |
12 | This inner part does not go below fiddle G , so that the violins could lend the powerful aid of their G strings to it ( coupled with other instruments of course ) were it not for the fact that their presence is urgently required to help out the top line . |
13 | Simon Grant , branch manager at Retail Cleaning in Bristol was recently asked to help out the annual Children in Need appeal by one of his customers , the manager at the East Gate Centre in Gloucester . |
14 | ‘ I was n't intending to play singles league tennis that season but suggested that I might be able to help out the youngsters and we won most of our matches 5–0 or 4–1 , ’ said Minnis . |