Example sentences of "out of [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In such cases the employer is not liable in general for any wrong which consists in the improper carrying out of such work , though he will , of course , be liable if unlawful acts are done which he has actually authorized .
2 Persistent attempts by fans to get out of such areas and into the opposition 's area is one of the most common reasons for their arrest or ejection from the ground .
3 Ashton 's dancers have to weave themselves into and out of such play without losing the flow of both music and movement .
4 The main conclusion drawn is not only that modern scientific notions of time are in many ways puzzling and paradoxical ; even more important for Shallis is that the essential quality of our actual experience of time is left out of such treatments altogether .
5 In the 1370s , when the real struggle was over , and the southern Scottish nobility were cheerfully driving the English out of such border territory as they still held , the failure to conquer the Scots produced one of the great literary epics , The Brus by John Barbour .
6 to carry out or arrange for the carrying out of such testing and examination as may be necessary for the performance of the duty imposed on him by sub-paragraph ( a ) ;
7 to carry out or arrange for the carrying out of such testing and examination as may be necessary for the performance of the duty imposed on him by sub-paragraph ( a ) ;
8 If they get there the men plot all kinds of strategies to get them out of such posts .
9 Only one good thing to come out of such cold — it kept the bugs from biting .
10 Pro-marketeers of a social democratic type have been prepared to manage markets : restricting the area of their use ( keeping them out of such things as health care ) ; moderating their tendency to generate inequality , ( by policies of income redistribution ) ; and preserving some of the market 's industrial casualties by nationalizing bankrupt firms and industries .
11 But again , what is often left out of such accounts of the unconscious , even as it is invoked as the prime destabilizer , is the importance of the perversions in precisely this respect : Freud insisted that what is operative from within the unconscious , producing this very instability , is repressed perversion .
12 OUT OF such calm , such mildness of manner , a bloodying havoc is wrought .
13 b ) any increase in the sums payable out of such money under the Immigration Act 1971 which is attributable to provisions about appeals to special immigration adjudicators , and
14 We would recommend that these should be taken out of such budgets . ’
15 It went on to exclude " all liability for any loss or damage arising from the use of any seeds or plants supplied by us and for any consequential loss or damage arising out of such use
16 ‘ Nothing but bad comes out of such trade .
17 It is out of such events that the visual field , indeed the visual world , is composed .
18 But I stress that this is a negative agreement — B by agreeing not to negotiate for this fixed period with a third party , locks himself out of such negotiations .
19 The payments are made pursuant to a perceived obligation to pay which results from the combined presumption of constitutional validity of duly enacted legislation and the holding out of such validity by the legislature .
20 The payments are made pursuant to a perceived obligation to pay which results from the combined presumption of constitutional validity of duly enacted legislation and the holding out of such validity by the legislature .
21 The court saw great dangers arising out of such secrecy .
22 To present them lucidly , and to draw a long line out of such material , is the pianist 's task ; and Postnikova hardly falters .
23 The development and carrying out of such ideas is one of the most active parts of the general ‘ hanging around ’ .
24 It is when the Great Detective makes a jump out of such ideas that he solves the baffling mystery , that he sees , to quote a famous example from Poe , that the best place to hide a letter is in a letter-rack .
25 By now Heseltine has probably got about as much mileage out of such occasions as he can reasonably expect .
26 When disputes arose out of such situations , both parties might turn to royal justice .
27 Councillors , most of whom firmly believed that their representative should have close ties with the ministers of the crown , found in a candidate 's ability to place friends in local revenue offices and other patronage appointments , and equally , his ability to move political enemies out of such places in the district towns , an effective means of evaluating a candidate 's qualification for membership in the House of Commons .
28 In the days of classical agriculture , breeders and stud farmers tricked and cajoled the best features out of many species , focusing on the most economically viable lines for cattle , sheep , pigs and poultry .
29 ‘ In a speech described as brusque and arrogant by West German sources , ’ reported Anna Tomforde in the Guardian , ‘ British representative Dr Martin Holdgate , the chief scientist at the Department of the Environment ’ said , ‘ We see no point in making heroic efforts at great cost , to control one out of many factors unless there is a reasonable expectation that such control will lead to real improvement in the environment . ’
30 For those who work outside the home , out of many choices , it was their ‘ relationship with colleagues ’ that gives them the most satisfaction ( 80% ) , with flexibility of working hours ( 68% ) and pay ( 60% ) trailing behind .
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