Example sentences of "will [vb infin] out [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ I will stride out with you , ’ she promised .
2 The jury will remain out for a year or two yet on whether the operating system can see off the threat from Microsoft Corp and its Windows NT , but Unix is definitely not winning big in the public relations stakes : the Wall Street Journal dismisses Unix as ‘ a catch-all term for many operating systems that share some features and a common parentage ’ .
3 The jury will remain out for a year or two yet on whether the operating system can see off the threat from Microsoft Corp and its Windows NT , but Unix is definitely not winning big in the public relations stakes : the Wall Street Journal dismisses Unix as ‘ a catch-all term for many operating systems that share some features and a common parentage ’ .
4 A second consequence is that UK competition law will remain out of line with EC law .
5 However his views seem split — ‘ but if we are not willing to rule in our turn , other men will rule out of theirs .
6 Some of the huge flocks of Scandinavian thrushes ( fieldfare , redwing , and song-thrush mainly ) which pass through in spring and autumn , will enter the traps but the majority will stay out on the hillsides .
7 PNG soldiers will stay out of the island and the ‘ Bougainville Revolutionary Army ’ , which has led the rebellion , will be disbanded .
8 The pound fell again as Mr Major insisted we will stay out of the ERM until it is reformed .
9 With its RISC strategy taken care of by HP , Sequoia has also handed over future development of its Motorola Inc family to Samsung Electronics Co , this time in exchange for the Korean marketplace , which Sequoia will stay out of .
10 I will steal out of the door unperceived .
11 Newry defender Errol Lutton , called into the 20-strong Irish training panel earlier this week , has a chance to impress coach Cees Koppelaar , but it 's not clear yet whether he will line out for Ireland or for his club !
12 Aidan McAteer is listed among the substitutes , but will line out in the left corner of the attack providing he comes through a late fitness test .
13 Coyle has also invited Irish League opposition and Derry will line out against Ballymena United on Saturday , July 31 and Crusaders on Saturday August 7 .
14 I see it happen but wait , hoping that as usual she will jump out from it , but it just gets worse and she slows almost to a stop .
15 It remains to be seen whether the archaeologists will win out over the urban planners .
16 ‘ We 're confident that the sheer quality of our children 's books will win out in the medium term , ’ he said .
17 Malcolmson ( 1984 : 126 ) argues that ‘ an essential feature of the world Williamson is interested in [ … ] is not one in which one can simply assume that economic efficiency will win out in the end ’ .
18 A dead body will fall out of the telephone
19 the hon. Member for Hemsworth ought to be more careful in his support for Boycott , or he will fall out with many of his own right hon. and hon. Friends .
20 Large particles will fall out within a few hundred kilometres of the detonation site ( the local fallout ) while smaller particles and gaseous radionuclides injected into the troposphere may be transported around the earth in the same hemisphere and between hemispheres by , for example , the East African low-level jet stream ( Findlater , 1974 ) , to be deposited hundreds or even many thousands of kilometres away ( the tropospheric fallout ) .
21 Only cut the amount required at one time , otherwise the extra slices will dry out during storage .
22 If putty is used ( as was common on older systems ) , this will dry out in time and the joint may leak .
23 If it does n't low income workers will be stuck in low option plans , high income workers will opt out to fee for service schemes , and ‘ quality ’ health care will be as elusive as it is now .
24 It can moreover lead to endless trouble : there are always children who will opt out on parental instructions or with parental permission , or who may be thought to need alternative provision .
25 Mr Patten remains convinced that most secondary schools will opt out within four years but is worried by the success of local campaigns against the switch .
26 For SCOTVEC centres , the most obviously new feature of the Quality Framework is the regular audit which SCOTVEC will carry out on centres ' internal quality systems .
27 The more the Word of God becomes part of our lives , the more of the Word we will pour out to our Lord .
28 We will send out for fish and chips .
29 That is when ‘ Taw Valley ’ will head out of Waterloo for Salisbury at 4pm .
30 At each stop national and local campaigners will speak out about problems facing walkers .
  Next page