Example sentences of "it out of the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Wapnick is tall and long-limbed , and he uses his reach to cut the ball off early in flight and to dig it out of the corners .
2 While Sequoia is optimistic that payment will ultimately be received , the uncertainty has led it and its auditors , in completing the year-end audit , to keep it out of the figures until the picture becomes clearer .
3 Mine constantly dragged it out of the pots .
4 She had no idea why he had telephoned her , though she did n't put it out of the realms of possibility that , having gone away when he 'd promised to think about the interview , he might well have rung to suggest some alternative .
5 Maybe we can keep it out of the papers . ’
6 No , no I got it out , I got it out of the papers last night .
7 The problem has been how to get get it out of the labs and into the industry , and ‘ I ca n't tell what 's going to happen when the horses are led to water , ’ admits Goldstein .
8 The problem has been how to get get it out of the labs and into the industry , and ‘ I ca n't tell what 's going to happen when the horses are lead to water , ’ admits Goldstein .
9 More important , in 1762 recruitment was made for the first time a direct concern of the government , taking it out of the hands of the regimental officers who had hitherto controlled it .
10 Other countries , including West Germany and Japan , are following , and the UK is a world leader in research , though our country 's usual secrecy has kept it out of the headlines .
11 Right , so in other words , we just take it out of the files , keep the children information in the tutor 's office and just extract what you want to put in somewhere else ?
12 And I do n't think if you 've got it out of the Guilds and say now we 've got to have so much for the rent this week I do n't think I would have a Guild very long , because they can go round the corner .
13 ‘ We pulled the donkey up : we took it out of the shafts , and took the shafts through the top of a five-bar gate .
14 Discussing with North in September 1986 how the arms-sales creditors could be paid off , he was alarmed to hear him say ‘ Well , maybe we 'll have to take it out of the reserves . ’
15 ‘ The sea has obviously come up and washed it out of the rocks and the heavy rain has probably washed the puddles of oil from high up on the banks where the sea was n't reaching . ’
16 Colonel Astor had bought The Times in 1922 specifically to keep it out of the clutches of Lloyd George , who was seeking a personal political base and had money to spend from his earlier sale of honours when Prime Minister .
17 So , who , you took it out of the bushes .
18 Yes , I took it out of the bushes get .
19 Firstly it belongs to John Major himself , for taking to the hustings , and restoring , a cutting edge to the party dialogue — and thus taking the Central Office by the scruff of the neck and lifting it out of the doldrums into which it had sunk .
20 THE Chancellor is ploughing £4 billion into industry to help pull it out of the doldrums .
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