Example sentences of "out [prep] [noun sg] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He would drag it out for exercise every day .
2 On 9 November 1984 I set out for consultation a list of branded drugs which would no longer be prescribed under the health service .
3 Scott weaves through the gate into second place ( above ) , but must watch out for Bouncer the dog and Mrs Mangel ( below ) .
4 We send her out for food every day
5 There 's toys there 's a shop just out for Christmas a pound .
6 He was dismayed by the vendor 's agents who confirmed they and their client were determined to hold out for double the offer .
7 Coun Szintai said it was easy for families to run out of money a day or two before Giro cheques were handed out .
8 In the absence of any agreement , or undertaking , then probably out of necessity the wife will have to pay for repairs , and explore the possibility when the trust comes to an end of applying to the court ( under " liberty to apply " ) for a variation of the division of the sale proceeds so that she is reimbursed .
9 Given that they have ruled out of court the concept of demand deficient unemployment , the new classical writers have left themselves with no alternative explanation : if markets are clearing , they must be clearing at different measured unemployment rates .
10 Furthermore , as we shall see shortly , the individualistic fallacy obscures an obvious but usually unasked question and , in so doing , rules out of court the answer to it which , as I hope to show , solves in large measure one of the fundamental problems of the social sciences and provides us with an unparalleled insight into the social psychopathology of present-day life .
11 A more common reason for brittle nails is repeated injury caused by heavy work or , for example , if your hands are in and out of water a lot .
12 They had run out of water the day before .
13 However anti-elitist and however defensive of a culturally democratic popular , within a modernist film criticism growing out of romanticism a canon emerges in which difference was ( and is ) identified with the author whose individual signature separates the text and the oeuvre from the cynical indifference of mass production .
14 Just the same as , see there 's so many out of work the amount of people that are going for the jobs , there 's so many of them they erm they 're all got some sort of experience , even if it 's just doing a a week .
15 It would be wiser to stay out of sight a while longer .
16 From somewhere out of sight a cockerel crows .
17 The other bloke tends to run out of road a bit do n't he ?
18 mail on the list is getting more and more out of order every day .
19 It will be a long haul , but we want to make out of date the notion that the only punishment that works is behind bars .
20 Almost by definition the manufacturing assets of the company are out of date the moment they are put up , because of the march of technology ( the purpose of management is , after all , continually to improve things ) .
21 It is also worth noting that Lawton claims that the HMIs may be pushing a model of curriculum planning ( based upon statements of aims and objectives ) which is out of date an issue we return to later in the chapter , and in Chapter 8 .
22 GETTING OUT OF BED A BIT EARLIER …
23 ‘ Besides , my friend Wotherspoon did n't mind being rousted out of bed an hour ago .
24 As a result 5,000 farmers are going out of business every year and the suicide rate for farmers has never been higher .
25 Akzo , the Dutch multinational chemical company , was found to have abused its dominant position in a particular chemical market by reducing its prices with the objective of driving out of business a competitor in the market in which Akzo held a dominant position .
26 The Reichmanns figured that if New York went out of business the world would go with it .
27 If an operator goes out of business the fund is used to rescue stranded holiday-makers or to provide alternative holidays .
28 You 're letting these bombers out of jail every day of the week instead of locking them up .
29 Just I mean out of interest the reason why I did n't take Sheffield
30 It is ironic that the right hon. Member for Finchley was pitched out of office a year ago today as a direct consequence of that ’ no , no , no ’ with which she infuriated the right hon. and learned Member for Surrey , East ( Sir G. Howe ) .
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