Example sentences of "out [prep] [noun pl] ['s] " in BNC.

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1 Using what little facts as she could chronologically find Dei then placed a perspective on this through ’ reading about the time she lived in and finding out about women 's lives in the 17th century Rome .
2 Bells ring out for cyclists ' safe return
3 They too drain the vitality out of women 's tears and replace them with passivity , penance and guilt .
4 At their first venture into the male Cooperative Congress in Edinburgh in 1884 , it was decided that there should be ‘ no platform speaking , no advertising , no going out of women 's place ’ .
5 Ever increasing reproductive technologies are re-ordering social aspects of reproduction , specifically women 's fertility , sexuality and pregnancies , by taking them to an industrial level , making them more and more scientific/medical procedures in need of ’ expert ’ interference , and so moving them even further out of women 's control .
6 It is important to recognise that the research itself , and its setting , inflicts its own contingencies on the choice of indicators : research using interviews will have to use indicators that are largely constructed out of respondents ' answers to questionnaire items whereas observational studies , and Lazarsfeld did not preclude them from variable analysis in principle , would have to use others .
7 Cook stake helps Airtours fly out of Owners ' clutches
8 The low rate is possible because loans are made out of members ' own savings .
9 Working out of members ' houses , Media , Technical , Finance , Fund Raising and liaison sub groups embarked upon an information spreading programme .
10 It 's functional and cheap and takes the work out of mothers ' work — the opposite of the colour supplements ' fascination with food and its production and the backlash against junk food , which present a chic counterculture of cooking not as work but as leisure and pleasure .
11 When you 're arguing about the money to be spend on repairs , and for example the reason why we 've had to get strict budgetary control on the amount of money which is being spent on repairs , is because that money all comes out of tenants ' rents , and it 's basically a balance — if we want to increase the erm numbers and the standard of repairs that we offer as a landlord , then it has to be met by a further increase in rents , and we think we 've got the balance about right at the moment .
12 In a few short weeks the scoops had torn a channel twenty feet wide from end to end , ripping the backbone out of Adventurers ' Fen …
13 The first thing I did when I got behind the houses was to get out of Nibs 's clothes . ’
14 It remains to be seen whether or not Darren Jackson will recover from the stomach injury which kept the striker out of Hibs ' Cup win over Cowdenbeath .
15 Figures like these have taken much of the fizz out of brewers ' forecasts .
16 Out of taxpayers ' pockets ?
17 Given its rather élitist duties , it is not surprising to note that the PSBC would be funded out of taxpayers ' money and rents paid by ITV contractors and not by the ( few ) consumers of its products .
18 The existence of a National Health Service paid for out of taxpayers ' money in the UK is also thought to affect the claims level .
19 There is a somewhat abstract quality about this body which currently operates out of solicitors ' premises somewhere in Berkshire .
20 I followed the cliff path which led steeply up out of Otters ' Bay and then westward over the headland for something less than half a mile , to bring me in sight of the bay I had seen yesterday .
21 By September 700 employees out of Chemicals ' 2,300-strong workforce will have completed the two-day EHO course and sat an examination .
22 So Marko told her that he had been ordered to build a tower out of elephants ' tusks .
23 Palmer had spent most of his life in and out of children 's homes and was in care himself when he became stepfather to the baby .
24 The plastic protective cover doubles as a wall hanger , keeping the tool safely out of children 's reach
25 Keep alcoholic drinks out of children 's reach .
26 OUP Australia pulling out of children 's books
27 This demand for money arises out of consumers ' desires to provide for unexpected , and therefore unplanned , expenditures .
28 While the chapel is a recognised central element , the mortuary is a separate building discreetly out of patients ' and visitor 's view .
29 An awareness of politics grows out of individuals ' perception of the world around them , and earlier in this book some of the main contributing factors to an African perception of the world , notwithstanding Africa 's great diversity , were sketched .
30 Phizacklea and Miles warn of the limits of any strategy premised on the assumption ( made in the 1970s by the TUC and the Labour Party ) that ‘ the way to eliminate working-class racism was to provide counter-arguments to common racist beliefs ’ , to push out of workers ' heads an ideological baggage primarily produced by the dominant class and replace it by ‘ the truth ’ .
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