Example sentences of "go out [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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31 We crossed the footbridge and went out into a silent forecourt .
32 Miley Taylor of Deepdale , who was in the Home Guard at the time , went out with a horse-drawn sledge to bring the bodies of the crew , all French-Canadians , down into Dent .
33 I went out with a new boy for a while and we fell in love .
34 ‘ Today he went out with a big score on the board and 15 overs remaining .
35 ‘ Invitations went out on a geographical basis so each night we had a good cross section of staff like roadworkers , clerical assistants or estimators .
36 The third was Babar , though we always skipped the part where Babar 's mother is shot by the hunter , and the fourth was a sing-a-long story called The Fox Went Out on a Chilly Night .
37 O , the Fox went out on a chilly night and he prayed to the moon to give him light …
38 Anna read the letter with incomprehension , then put Charlotte into her secondhand pram — donated by the Young Wives ' Group — and went out for a long and significant walk .
39 Then Crawford went out for a welcome late-night meal , before staying up to read the reviews in the early editions of the next day 's newspapers .
40 Lieutenant Gerry Mackenzie reported by telephone — the civilian network remained open long after the Japanese invasion — that he could see lights in the estuary of the Comoro river and a patrol went out for a quick recce .
41 If I did manage to get the rubber disc in now , but then he arrived an hour or two late , and then we went out for a romantic candle-lit dinner , and then we chatted for a while … the spermicide would have decided to cease hostilities at just about the time I needed it to be at its most fierce .
42 WILLIE WOOD 's quest for the world indoor singles crown , which began back in 1982 , reached another dead end yesterday when the 1989 runner-up went out after a titanic five-set battle with England 's Mel Biggs .
43 This week , I went out in a new , ankle-length skirt for the first time .
44 Playing with Coceres he went out in a level par 36 and started the homeward half with three successive pars to be five shots off the lead .
45 Ned went out by a parallel track , the Caples , so as to get back to Queenstown for New Year festivities .
46 Just as teacher secondment is most successful when teachers go out with a specific purpose in mind , so employer secondment works best when employers come into school with a particular task to perform .
47 I do n't care if they go out with a different girl every day of the week as well as me , but suddenly they want to be the one and only . ’
48 When the offer first came up we 'd had an even lower-budget series go out on a national US cable network but , apart from that critically-lauded effort , no TV experience .
49 With almost half the present team threatening to retire at the end of the season — and who can blame them if it means that they go out on a high note — this was excellent news .
50 Once a month I go out for a serious session — the last of which was a hard circuit of Radnor Forest , but I enjoyed it tremendously . ’
51 I always hang up promptly and go out for a nice cup of coffee to cheer myself up .
52 She listened sympathetically , murmured the right endearments and then said , ‘ The only thing to do now is to get up , have a shower , go out for a brisk walk and come back and have a nice soothing gin and tonic . ’
53 There 's al , it 's like next Friday we 're all planning to go out but there 'll be fifteen of us , see we all go out in a big group .
54 By 1900 no gentleman and few ladies would have gone out without a smart , tightly furled umbrella of black silk with a touch of silver on the handle .
55 Few coffin-makers had the talent to fashion such an item , so an order would have gone out to a local plumber .
56 It 's pretty hard to think about that when you 've just gone out of a Grand Slam event as early as that .
57 Her social life seemed to be quite full , and she had gone out with a young man on a couple of occasions .
58 And so Ruth , the one who has gone out as a poor glean and walking behind the reapers , hoping they would treat her kindly .
59 When someone came into the room he realised he had gone out in a sweet unconscious .
60 Clearly she could not go out through a locked door — so where is she ? ’
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