Example sentences of "out [prep] the [noun sg] in " in BNC.
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1 | Reinvoicing activity is rather different , providing a stopping off point that holds itself out as the origin in communication with the customer ( or possibly the tax authorities of the customer 's territory ) . |
2 | All the analysis ignores the fact that the product that is intrinsically the best almost never comes out as the winner in the market : in the immortal words scriptwriter Vincent Lawrence put into Mae West 's mouth , when it comes to the market success of MS-DOS or the IBM Personal Computer standard , goodness had nothing to do with it . |
3 | Hewlett-Packard currently looks by far the best placed of the biggest manufacturers to come out as the winner in the 1990s — but then three or four years ago , that was being said about DEC . |
4 | In the US there have been extensive experiments with new forms of reporting and in Europe , Germany stands out as the leader in environmental reporting . |
5 | We had agreed at the start of this thing that pressing the Harwich local council for housing would probably be more trouble than it was worth : if one of their inspectors had decided to check my circumstances with the port authorities , the customs people would inevitably have found out about the way in which I had been using their cupboard ( and would have had a pink fit , probably ) . |
6 | You never find out about the water in the instrument systems until you are airborne and it will ruin that flight , if not the entire flying for that day . |
7 | When Stirling found out about the plan in which his unit was to be involved , he was even more furious . |
8 | ‘ Remember how you found out about the affair in the first place ? ’ she said . |
9 | Maybe we should listen out for the noise in the voices of Kristin Hersh , Tim Buckley , Prince , Michael Jackson — the way they chew and twist language not for any decipherable , expressive reason , ( that 's to say , not to accentuate more deeply the conventional mannerisms of ‘ passion ’ ) , but for the gratuitous voluptuousness of utterance itself . |
10 | At Myitkyina we camped out for the night in a mission schoolroom and early next morning managed to get a lift out to the airstrip two miles away . |
11 | The sharp cold , after his warm exertions , took his breath away for a moment as he hung on the stern of the canoe , but as soon as he had recovered his breath , the Commander struck out for the shore in a strong breaststroke that did not disturb the phosphorescence more than he could help , and barely ruffled the water . |
12 | I 'd seen Chola and Mina setting out for the forest in the early morning , and three times during the day I 'd watched them coming back , stooped over and staggering under the weight of the enormous loads that spread across their backs , stretching three times broader than their shoulders and several feet above their heads . |
13 | A white , middle-class widow sets out for the hinterland in search of her maid 's son ; but the police have found him first . |
14 | Based around the museum site was No. 7027 ‘ Thornbury Castle ’ awaiting restoration , plus modern preserved diesel/electric motive power in the shape of No. 40118 and No. 50043 =Eagle ’ , the latter externally turned out for the extravaganza in Network South East colours . |
15 | Tolstoy spells it out for the reader in ways that are terribly painful ; he leaves no room for pictures ’ ( quoted ibid . |
16 | She is amazed how many teenagers are allowed out during the week in the run-up to examinations . |
17 | Currents pass in through the sides of the shell , over the ciliated lophophore where the food is extracted , and then out through the depression in the margin of the valves . |
18 | The next thing she knew James Halden was carrying her out through the yard in strong , muscular arms . |
19 | Unfortunately , puppies in particular may rush out through the door in this situation , often ignoring the visitor , and could end up on the road . |
20 | At 7.30 I am walking out through the town in the direction of Lochy bridge then across Blarmhor . |
21 | It was dark by the time the arriving passengers began to fan out through the town in search of lodgings . |
22 | Out through the lightning-split in the great oak of light |
23 | However , he telephoned from Kigali on Saturday to say that they had been taken out through the area in which the fighting had taken place without mishap . |
24 | But the Soviet leader had rather more success in prising discussions out of the West in that a foreign ministers ' conference was held about Germany in mid-1959 in Geneva . |
25 | It must be because it gets me out of the tent in the middle of the night to stand and contemplate the untroubled majesty of The Plough . |
26 | Kitty 's father had been a woodman , born more than ninety years ago , in the reign of Queen Anne , just out of the valley in Lamplugh , a village named after one of the Conqueror 's more savage barons and ever since his brutal arrival sunk in the spellbound gloom of ossified superstition . |
27 | Well I think I 'm , covered around the heating out , you ai n't going to get anything out of the juice in the pollution prevention basically . |
28 | Over coffee in the study Miss Danziger thanked the guests individually for their concern , apologised for interrupting their enjoyment of an excellent meal , and explained that so long as she came out of the spasm in less than a minute and a half it was not dangerous and left no ill-effects . |
29 | Adoption was out of the question in this country I think in Grampian region there was four babies for |
30 | Mr McNeilage and another British research student , Jocelyn Milner , from Buckinghamshire , who arrived there earlier this month , should have pulled out of the centre in the tropical rainforest last week . |