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

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1 Both Croatia and the Lebanon objected on the grounds that Sotheby 's had been far from complete in its discovery process , and was trying to slip out from the case before the evidence of Mr Camber was made available .
2 The hippocampus is a structure which can readily be dissected out from the brain together with its input pathways , such as the perforant pathway .
3 I felt the corporeal elephant on whose back my world was supported amble effortlessly along , rather that it being necessary for me to lean out from the howdah of my head and goad him .
4 ‘ Shut yer row down theea , ’ a voice boomed out from the darkness .
5 Fling them out from the darkness , my lost
6 A peal of laughter rolled out from the darkness in front of them ; rich and deep and full of warmth .
7 The process leaves residues of unburnt coal and ash , which are separated out from the flue gas and put back into the furnace .
8 ‘ They say they have gathered in all who would come out from the north side down to Pitnacree , and the south side as far up as Kenmore. , ‘ The Grandtully crowd ?
9 Spurn is a long thin peninsula , jutting three-and-a-half miles out from the North Humberside mainland .
10 The unusual size was chosen to give more space to the visuals and to stand out from the standard A4 size so common in offices .
11 ‘ And Moses and Aaron said unto all the children of Israel , At even , then ye shall know that the Lord hath brought you out from the land of Egypt : And in the morning , then ye shall see the glory of the Lord ; for that he heareth your murmurings against the Lord : and what are we , that ye murmur against us ?
12 I fear not , for indeed ‘ they hearkened not unto Moses ’ , they murmured against him , and against Aaron , which is to say , they murmured against the Lord , for was it not the Lord Himself , speaking and working in Moses , who had brought them out from the land of Egypt ? ’
13 In autumn fast ice grows out from the land to meet new ice that forms at sea ; from a March minimum of 3–5 million km 2 the pack ice spreads to 17–20 million km 2 by September ( Foster , 1984 ) , an annual variation far greater than that of the Arctic Ocean ( Figure 5.5 ) .
14 George said : ‘ Well I dare say I could find out from the Land Registry . ’
15 The trial judge , Rice J , found in the squatters ' favour : Boosey said the fence was there to keep sheep out from the land he was treating as his own …
16 The subsidence now takes place farther out from the land-mass , in the off-shore belt ( " 5 " ) perhaps simply by the widening of the depression with continued subsidence .
17 This mill was built of brick instead of stone like the Old Mill in the village , and the original six-storey building survives among the extensions built around it , with Arkwright 's peculiar staircase projection with Venetian and small semi-circular windows standing out from the sea of square-headed windows on either side , and with a cupola above .
18 Each scale is a hard , dry shield of keratin growing out from the animal 's epidermis and overlapping with its neighbours to make a body-covering that is as snugly fitting as it is strong .
19 Christmas means the teams who go out from the TV licensing HQ in Bristol are getting ready to hear a lot more lame excuses .
20 Morrissey stood out from the bill in that he 's not yobbish .
21 A loud guffaw boomed out from the lounge and he glanced through the doorway , thankful to be out-of the way .
22 A uniformed policeman had stepped out from the kerb up ahead and was waving them into a side road .
23 He started the engine at once and pulled impatiently out from the kerb , as if still trying to shake off that introspective question of his .
24 An unmarked Ford Escort pulled out from the kerb slow enough to give me plenty of time to ease up and reach for the horn .
25 ‘ Where to ? ’ he asked , pulling out from the kerb .
26 You no longer signal when you 're pulling out to overtake , ( unless to warn fast-approaching traffic behind you ) ; nor do you signal right when pulling out from the kerb .
27 And finally you can look out from the balcony , high up in the White Cliffs , from which Winston Churchill viewed the Battle of Britain .
28 To the right , Ajayi knew , If she leaned out from the balcony ( which she did not like to do as she was a little afraid of heights ) , she would be able to see the quarries , and the start of the thin , also snow-covered and treeless line of stunted hills .
29 Thwaite is also on the Pennine Way and it was the Pennine Way route I took one August cloudy day lip and out from the village towards Keld .
30 As a result they flew out from the hive at an angle of 85° to the right of where the food actually was .
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