Example sentences of "out [prep] a [noun] [that] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Settling tanks can be of several types , and they use the principle of slowing the rate of flow of the water to allow the solid particles to fall out as a sludge that can be removed separately . |
2 | So erm I 'm just throwing this out as an idea that we perhaps we offer one half of this amount here |
3 | When we worked it out as an average that the sheer monitoring and chasing quotes or following up quotes erm and just preparing the documentation , we were n't convinced that was the case at all . |
4 | Mr Graham Crowley says the North-East stands out as an area that is creating opportunities for artists and many craft people encouraged to move to the region in readiness for Arts ‘ 96 . |
5 | After years of industry — and the country — being almost paralysed by strikes and restrictive practices , the country was crying out for a Government that would give a lead . |
6 | Chapman became a target man in more ways than one as the Germans singled him out for a buffeting that went unpunished by Swedish referee Rune Larsson . |
7 | We went out for a lunch that was late even by Madrid standards , then went to a zarzueia . |
8 | The move follows six months of negotiations during which the City of London , which owns some of the land on which the polytechnic is built , stuck out for a rent that one expert said was three times the market value ( New Scientist , 6 January , p 7 ) . |
9 | From the demonstrations of British pluck and enterprise in The Wooden Horse ( 1950 ) , the first of a series of escape pictures , and the celebration of one woman 's heroism in the Anna Neagle-starring Odette ( 1950 ) , through action films such as The Dam Busters ( 1955 ) , The Battle of the River Plate ( 1956 , Pursuit of the Graf Spee in US ) and Sink the Bismark ( 1960 ) , there is a sense of well-known events being played out for an audience that already knew about them . |
10 | They went out through a door that was marked ‘ Hours of Opening : 08.00 to 23.59 ’ . |
11 | My beer was to be in a posh hotel where I was being treated for my birthday , and after the heaven of getting out of a T-shirt that was generating its own new species of life in the arm pits , and into a hot bath , I looked forward to discussing the day eagerly with my companion . |
12 | I said to him we made her a cup of coffee out of a teapot that was bought and she says she was talking about it . |
13 | Like many others , he attended the founding meeting out of a conviction that ‘ something had to be done ’ . |
14 | A smaller number volunteered to assist the rebels , likewise out of a conviction that on Spanish soil a wider struggle was being fought out . |
15 | As with socialism , its inherent limitations were as important in this respect as its positive aspects : Luis Recabarren founded his Socialist Workers ' party partly out of a conviction that anarchist prohibitions on party and parliamentary activity were short-sighted and had to be rejected . |
16 | Changes of emphasis within art education , which have arisen out of a realization that the skills of response and appreciation do not necessarily result from the practice of art , have led to explorations into the nature of aesthetic experience , enquiries into its patterns of development and attempts to assess the skills and achievements possible within this area ( APU , 1983 ) . |
17 | The US government began to look favourably on such plans in the mid-sixties , presumably out of a realization that something more permanent than arm-twisting had to be done to protect the gold in Fort Knox . |
18 | There 's an amazing amount of feel that you can get out of a guitar that you could never get out of any other instrument . |
19 | ‘ She had never been out of Italy before — now there she was without as much as a full day 's notice at Brown 's Hotel looking on top hats and umbrellas out of a window that worked like a guillotine . |
20 | This was not altruism on the part of the brewers , but was born out of a realisation that preserving the best of their heritage could make them money . |
21 | The idea for this workshop came out of a realisation that Modularity was very much back on the agenda in a wide variety of institutions . |
22 | If they start to moan at long , boring nights of inactivity , the bottom could quickly fall out of a tour that in cricketing terms has all the ingredients of being a huge success . |
23 | We thought that if it was only one tournament out of a Tour that was growing so fast it would not matter . |
24 | It blazed naked out of a sky that could not remember what cloud was . |
25 | It has to fend for itself , out of a budget that has just about risen with inflation in recent years . |
26 | Pavel levers himself into his car , forcing movement out of a body that longs for sleep more than anything else . |
27 | At the window they laughed together and bit a knuckle , like children or housemaids — watching avidly , they saw the two boys get out of a car that could not be Robert 's . |
28 | The character , the flamboyance is being f—ed and sucked out of a business that traditionally thrives on the outrageous . |
29 | She gave him a Coke out of a fridge that held caviare , half-empty tins of sardines and water-chestnuts , and medicine bottles for the dogs . |
30 | His apprehension arose not out of a fear that she would ruin him by extravagant expenditure but from a neurotic anxiety that if she knew how much money he had put away , she might feel free to leave him . |