Example sentences of "out from a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Of great methodological importance is the principle of accountability , which in essence states that analysts should not selectively pick out from a text those variants of a variable which tend to confirm their argument , while ignoring others which do not .
2 Superimposing the pattern of a sound wave ( such as a person 's voice ) on to an electromagnetic wave ( such as the radio waves sent out from a telephone ) is simple and effective .
3 It 's mainly the feeling of insecurity when they 're a long way out from a telephone .
4 The postman was a tall , skinny man with near-white hair and a permanent stoop ; this brief caricature of an impression was all that Forester had been able to make out from a distance .
5 We 're taking a hundred and fifty odd thousand out from a budget we have for additional staffing , and we 're also taking
6 ‘ You 're not to worry about a thing , Rachaela , ’ she must have found the name out from a nurse .
7 These same qualities are needed by lecturers , so it is no surprise that some excellent critical writings , such as many of John Ruskin 's books , were first read out from a lectern .
8 A rat suddenly darted out from a hole in the side of the drum and she had to bite back the scream that rose in her throat .
9 The end-point of the walkable , or sometimes scramble-able section of the Gorges is at a waterfall , where the water shoots out from a hole in the rock on the left and falls sixty or seventy feet into the stream .
10 And then something was coughed out of that blackened spot with a sound like liquid choking ; coughed out from a hole where there was no hole , with such force that the jumbled shape landed with a slap on the corridor floor , five feet from the wall .
11 It was like the noise made by a steam locomotive pulling out from a station .
12 Suddenly something she had heard her daddy read out from a newspaper flashed back to her .
13 That morning , when he was about a quarter of a mile from the school gate , a Volvo estate car drew out from a side-road and drove straight at him .
14 First we may consider the phrase : ( 25 ) acrobatic performance In the light of the discussion above we may remark that this can be understood in either of two ways : first , as covering any performance which is so described because it is linked with the idea of an acrobat in the execution of his or her professional duties ; this would include expertise in juggling , tightrope walking , standing on one 's hands , and so on , even if they are performed by an amateur lacking any natural talent for the task ; second , ( 25 ) may be used to designate any performance which is acrobatic in itself , even if not part of the normal repertoire of acrobats , for instance , grabbing hold of a branch growing out from a cliff just after falling from the top .
15 No you you do n't have to rub out the line you can just draw another one as if it 's coming out from a bit you ca n't see .
16 A muffled crackle splutters out from a walkie-talkie inside his jacket , and he pulls it out to log in .
17 Here , a fourth reminder of something spewed out from a computer .
18 Politicians of the majority party without ministerial office find themselves frustratingly shut out from a decision making process into which they are given few insights .
19 When a sizeable group is commissioned and sent out from a church large gaps remain .
20 The few studies that have been undertaken have been carried out from a management perspective in terms of stock management or to quantity overall use of library , materials apart from items recorded in circulation statistics .
21 Simply pouring the beer out from a can did not generate the force needed to initiate the gas break-out that creates the head .
22 It was market day and the wide curving flight of steps leading up to the centre was lined with flimsy tables covered in kitchenware and watches and clothing and tools and toys Music blared out from a stall selling bootleg cassette tapes .
23 It is basically the function of the designer to protect the client 's interest and ensure that the food service planning is carried out from a food service operator 's point of view , rather than from the architect 's or interior designer 's point of view .
24 This sense of coping with the ‘ business of living ’ was one of the themes that came out from a study conducted by the writer and a colleague from the Tavistock Institute for a client in 1974 ( see Appendix One ) .
25 They knew that palladium soaks up deuterium ( a form of hydrogen found in heavy water ) like a sponge soaks up water , an electrical current from a battery forcing the deuterium atoms out from a solution of heavy water and into the spaces between the palladium atoms .
26 Hill , these tunes leap out from a radio like recent Def Leppard , Nelson and Aerosmith singles , and once you 've got airplay , you 've got America .
27 Hill , these tunes leap out from a radio like recent Def Leppard , Nelson and Aerosmith singles , and once you 've got airplay , you 've got America .
28 As applied to advertising , it can , in theory , be used to separate out from a product 's sales the effects of different aspects of marketing activity , so as to assess the contribution of advertising .
29 A tiny frog is in the hands of environmental health officers after it leapt out from a bunch of bananas , bought in a supermarket in the Forest of Dean .
30 What is offered is not the results of detailed observation and validation , but an attempt to argue out from a comparison of , on the one hand , declared principles and objectives , and on the other hand , personal experience and published accounts , the fuller implications of resource-based learning in practice .
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