Example sentences of "out [prep] [n mass] [unc] " in BNC.

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1 Trumpet fish may even locate their prey by listening out for fish 's calls .
2 The old iron rising-main still protrudes from out of Roe 's old flooded shaft where it was unbolted all those years ago .
3 When they went through the first gate at the bottom of the hill they were out of people 's eyes for the first time since they had met .
4 Stories come out of people 's failings and falsities , and how they resolve them . ’
5 She flits in and out of people 's lives and never stays long enough to allow anyone to get to know her .
6 They 're trying to make money out of people 's ignorance but there is nothing they do which licensees could n't do for themselves perfectly well . ’
7 And it does n't , because she suddenly rushes off , and I have to run after her , shouting about when am I going to see her again , and jumping out of people 's way into the gutter . ’
8 ‘ I do n't think you two , ’ said Sorrel , sniffing loudly , ‘ are in any position to take the Mick out of people 's names .
9 Erm yeah if er you have no objection , what it 's for is the , there 's this outfit called the British National Corpus and they 're trying to make a record of English Language as it 's used in the late twentieth century erm so it 's a sort of resource for further scholarship so it can assist in writing dictionaries and studying grammar and , and all sorts of things like that and erm they 're attempting to tape conversations from all over the place erm er I 've got a bit of bumph about it , it 's quite interesting erm and in some cases it 's sort of out of erm er it 's out of people 's homes , it 's out of broadcasts , it 's out of meetings , it 's out of all sorts of things erm at work and at home erm
10 Get a a small piece , you could buy a I think it was called a side of leather or a whole piece of leather and cut yourselves out of it.And erm leather was n't cheap even in those days , it varied in thickness .
11 They are moving out onto people 's desks and almost into Woolworths .
12 If dogs are put out from people 's houses and left to stray , there is a welfare problem .
13 The extent and nature of the duty owed to lawful visitors are set out in s. 2(1) and s. 2(2) OLA 1957 .
14 The duty set out in s. 2(1) OLA 1957 applies ‘ except insofar as he ( the occupier ) is free to and does extend , restrict , modify or exclude his duty to any visitor or visitors by agreement or otherwise ’ .
15 They might be astonished to find , soon after , that those very same cartons and bottles and tins have perhaps been thrown out in people 's , in people 's .
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