Example sentences of "were [verb] out of [art] " in BNC.

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1 Here and there lumps of metal were sticking out of the masonry .
2 The mangled remains of a bicycle were sticking out of the windscreen of the lower car .
3 She shrugged ruefully , and ten minutes later they were speeding out of the village .
4 Under the 1987 treaty on Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces [ see p. 35602 ] the last of the US ground-launched nuclear-armed cruise missiles stationed in Europe under the 1979 NATO " twin-track " decision [ see pp. 30159-60 ] were flown out of the US base at Comiso , Sicily , on March 26 .
5 The party appointments came after the leadership had authorised a statement formally apologising to the Czechoslovak people for leading the country into its latest crisis , before they were hustled out of the building because the cleaners wanted to go home .
6 The lifters were tested three weeks ago and were booted out of the Olympics for taking Clenbuterol .
7 The winning department was given two tea sets and the names of the employees were picked out of a hat to find the winners .
8 A vacuum cleaner nozzle was inserted into a hole in the lining and all the wrinkles were sucked out of the material to leave a completely smooth , seamless finish .
9 Having read about the way in which Adam and Eve were beguiled out of the garden , Christians settle for being innocent as doves and leave others to be wise as serpents .
10 ‘ We were robbed out of the game , ’ said an angry Chapman .
11 Vangmoor came up on the screen as if they were looking out of the window , but Vangmoor in summer without the wind and with leaves on the trees .
12 ‘ We were living out of a hat dramatising dirty jokes .
13 Trees were cleared from the banks , and raised flood-banks were built out of the dredged material alongside the stream course .
14 After 1800 the railways increased this trade and docks were built out of the mudflats along the waterfront of the Humber itself .
15 My head popped outside ; five young men were bounding out of the darkness from a car on the road .
16 Substantial payments were made out of the Forest revenues for these and other purposes relating to the maintenance and upkeep of the castle .
17 However , speaking to Hot Press 's George Byrne at a later date , Johnny Marr attempted to dispel the controversy surrounding Gannon : ‘ Things were made out of the situation which we did n't intend .
18 Whether payments were made out of the temple 's revenues to sustain the king 's household is not known .
19 He marvelled at the girl 's patience as her charge ran hither and thither , collecting shells and seaweed , splashing in the waves at the water 's edge , letting out little shrieks of excitement and then relapsing into relative quietness when food and drink were produced out of a knapsack .
20 Suspicions were got out of the way .
21 Buddleias were growing out of the gutters and doves watched her stone-still , looking like part of the masonry .
22 It did not so much contest with the establishment as succeed in areas like the mining districts of Cornwall , Kingswood and around Newcastle , where there was no contest in the sprawling villages which were growing out of the reach of a moribund parish structure .
23 Closed basins as deep as 135 feet were bitten out of the underlying basalt .
24 Flames were pouring out of a well .
25 It always seemed that they reappeared around Palm Sunday when people were pouring out of the churches carrying little sprays of olive leaves that looked silvery in the hard sunlight .
26 Well-dressed suckers were pouring out of the upstairs theatre , barrelling down the rickety spiral staircase , skidding on the highly polished floor .
27 The Benefits Agency spokesman said the figures for budget loans showed that 7,509 people were helped out of the 13,060 applications made .
28 For crisis loans , helping customers meet expenses in an emergency , 3,315 people were helped out of the 3,508 applications made .
29 After the prayer that ended their silent repast that evening , the cadets were filing out of the refectory to return to their barren cells .
30 They still include many high flyers ; but Mr Cormack shows that an appreciable number are now likely to be modest attainers who were crowded out of a place at home .
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