Example sentences of "go out into the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'm going out into the river and I 'll be back for you very soon . ’ |
2 | ‘ I think I can hear Edwin and Daisy at the door , ’ said Sophia in a relieved tone , going out into the hall . |
3 | Lots of chemists have made very good chartered accountants , for example , but I would like to see very many more — let's say science trained people going out into the professions , particularly into politics . |
4 | I did n't like going out into the yard when she was there . ’ |
5 | It 's , you know , it 's like what 's his Captain Oates was it , going out into the tent in the Antarctic or something , you know it 's sort of I may be gone for a while , you know , in the in the , into the wilderness and never to return so that in , in the British structure er politicians are , their loyalty is central rather than local because their political futures are determined centrally rather than locally . |
6 | ‘ You are n't thinking of going out into the jungle to exercise for old times ’ sake ? ’ |
7 | They do not see women going out into the world and doing . |
8 | They were going out into the world though none of them knew quite where until it was announced in public at their Commissioning Service it , the Albert Hall . |
9 | He got up and went back down the stairs , going out into the gathering darkness , across the priory grounds behind the chapel from where he could hear the sweet , melodious chant of the nuns as they sang the first psalm of Compline . |
10 | ‘ Saturday 's situation appears to have been caused because people delayed before going out into the rain . ’ |
11 | I just think that when you 're up there it 's like the stage is a huge platform going out into the crowd , a long one ! |
12 | What excuse could I make for going out into the garden ? " |
13 | erm but , but certainly the , the er er the period has given the Communist Party er quite a large number of trained cadres which will be able to go out into the villages in a way that they had n't been able to in because it would , that was all too soon . |
14 | Indeed the anonymous reviewer of the Pope and Weiner edition went on to propose that ‘ if the police staff college is to fulfil its task [ of producing a major project ] with any credibility , it must encourage its academic staff to go out into the field to study policing at first hand ’ . |
15 | Members began to go out into the country on day trips , and the first cricket match between two deaf clubs in the country , which later led to the formation of inter-institute sports activities of billiards , darts , and other sports , took place on 23rd July 1892 at Manchester between Manchester Deaf and Dumb Institute and the Bolton and Bury Institutes . |
16 | Did n't fishermen like to go out into the middle of lakes to fish ? |
17 | Just to go out into the night can give a sense of this ; night is not empty darkness — the night can be warm , or stormy , still or windy , and the darkness is charged by this and has a changing life of its own . |
18 | LEFT Never ignore a young dog 's request to go out into the back yard because this can cause it to soil around the home , and inhibits the toilet-training process . |
19 | If there was a moon she used to go out into the yard , and look at the moon , and prophesy what the world was going to be like tomorrow . |
20 | She loved to be alone , to be brave , to go out into the arms of her destiny fearlessly , like a knight into the lists . |
21 | If nothing else we hope that by attending college the students will have gained the confidence and determination to go out into the community and demand that changes be made . |
22 | His job was to go out into the bush to take samples and he found it the most unspoilt area on Earth he has ever been to , areas the size of Wales in which no white man has ever set foot . |
23 | You 're preparing me to go out into the street , but I still have to go back to the system first . |
24 | One of the best ways of getting enough vitamin D is to go out into the sunshine . |
25 | It is quite legal to go out into the countryside , find a hedgehog and pull off its legs one by one . |
26 | Especially if it meant he had to go out into the dark . |
27 | THE first Class of ‘ 92 sits expectantly — 40 young men and women ready to go out into the world . |
28 | Her grandfather 's insistence that she was free to go out into the world now and take a course of training was so much nonsense . |
29 | Finally , once the client has agreed the schedule with the agency ( which may well be done before the content of the ads is finally agreed ) , it is the media person 's job to go out into the marketplace and buy the press space , the poster sites or the TV , radio or cinema spots . |
30 | It was late in the afternoon when he realised that he had eaten nothing since breakfast , and he was about to go out into the town in search of a restaurant when the telephone rang . |