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

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1 But with 50pc remission and consideration of the time he spent on remand , he will be allowed out for weekends by next February .
2 Difficulties are smoothed out for pupils by , for example , ensuring that awkward cases do not occur or that the numbers cancel or that the answer is not a fraction .
3 Kim had been on the Wiring Project for almost year now , though for most of that time he had been kept out of things by Spatz .
4 The old Minister of Health , 1949–64 , was responsible to Parliament directly for the hospital services , being almost wholly provided by the taxpayer , and indirectly for the health and welfare services provided partly out of the rates and partly out of taxes by local authorities .
5 Yet they were tricked out of lands by Daniel Boone and others and forced to take part in the ‘ Trail of Tears ’ , the enforced march from Kentucky and Tennessee to northern Oklahoma , during which 4,000 out of 16,000 Cherokees died .
6 The Kantineservice case did not cover franchise or licence businesses but covered the contracting out of services by a customer to an independent contractor .
7 He 'll be out of tablets by now .
8 Private parties are welcome out of hours by prior arrangement .
9 You better have your orchards well fenced or you 'll be out of apples by October . ’
10 This takes note of the widespread area staff wish for the larger piece of time in a Region ( but also gives the shorter period too ) : it reduces a lot of sorting out of requests by the Overseas Groups and simplifies for them a pretty complicated and demanding piece of work : it means we do n't expect visitors to fly from one end of the UK & Ireland every 2 or 3 days as has sometimes happened in trying to meet a lot of requests .
11 Marina Shipping Ltd v. Laughton ( 1982 ) was one in a long line of cases arising out of attempts by the International Transport Workers Federation ( ITF ) to force ship owners employing cheap labour recruited abroad to pay European standard rates of wages .
12 Jones said : ‘ Wimbledon have been knocked out of Cups by lower teams .
13 Many newsagents were cleaned out of Mirrors by 8 am .
14 I stay through two more routine calls , and we 've run out of subjects by five-thirty .
15 The deal was calculated to improve Unedic 's financial position by F25,000,000 ( about US$5,000,000 ) by end-1992 and meant that Unedic , which was funded entirely by companies and their employees , would not run out of funds by October as would otherwise have been the case .
16 A disposition is a very wide term and for instance a transfer out of assets by trustees to a tenant for life although it would not be a transfer of value would nevertheless be a disposition .
17 The countries are hopeful that a commitment of substantial financial aid will take the heat out of demands by six southern African states for the resumption of controlled ivory trading , the profits of which , the southern Africans claim , would help to fund further conservation measures .
18 On previous occasions , we 've often started to run out of supplies by the final day .
19 A feature of this section is a stream issuing from Hackergill Cave on the south bank , but this , along with the other wonders of the river hereabouts , must be regarded as out of bounds by the prudent pedestrian .
20 The Spanish star 's tee shot was carried out of bounds by the wind , and he five-putted from only 12ft to realise every hacker 's nightmare .
21 OUT OF BOUNDS by Mike Seabrook ( GMP ; 297pp ; £7.95 pb ) —
22 We 're always a little doubtful about statements that have to be forced out of witnesses by revealing the extent of our prior information . ’
23 Silicon availability has McNealy bragging that Sun will have more multiprocessing servers out with customers by the end of this year than all the rest of the industry combined in the history of the world .
24 The trust 's conservation manager , Dr Charles Beardall , said : ‘ Vegetation which has taken centuries to become established is being wiped out in minutes by these vehicles and important bird colonies are being disturbed . ’
25 How can university personnel be involved to support research carried out in schools by teachers ?
26 Although the gross changes in the brain that accompany and probably cause it can be studied after the death of the patient , the details of the disease process are just beginning to be worked out in animals by studying the microscopic structure of the brain regions that are principally involved together with their biochemistry and their neurotransmitters .
27 Of the two cantatas , Le jaloux is psychologically truer to life , for its ‘ hero ’ runs through a wider gamut of emotions , spelt out in recitatives by unusually copious tempo and character directions .
28 The new industry of salmon-farming has filled the gap as far as the scavenging gulls are concerned : the rearing cages are placed in the sheltered bays and ‘ sounds ’ between the islands and are fed on high-protein , manufactured food in pellet form , which are ferried out in sacks by small boats .
29 In addition , the Medway Letter Line is the basis for calculating the cost benefit of all schemes carried out on rivers by water authorities and other organizations .
30 Not a large amount in Saudi terms , but enough ; l per cent of every invoice paid out to contractors by the Ministry .
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