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

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1 There is a small triangular park behind it and the crowd may have spilled out from the Great Hall .
2 Likewise , the purpose of introducing science into the secondary schools was never in doubt to such leading advocates as H. E. Roscoe , the first President of the Association of Public School Science Masters ( the precursor of our Association for Science Education ) ; school science was , for Roscoe , as Layton quotes him , to be ‘ the means of sifting out from the great mass of the people those golden grains of genius which now are too often lost amongst the sands of mediocrity ’ .
3 Bob drew one of the rush-bottomed chairs out from the great dining-table in the middle of the kitchen and sprawled in it .
4 In his thirty-two-foot ketch , Nuria , he set out from the small harbour under the shoulder of his Hebridean island .
5 It said : ‘ The Princess of Wales would like to single out from the recent wave of misleading reports about the Royal Family assertions in some newspapers this week directed specifically against the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh .
6 It said : ‘ The Princess of Wales would like to single out from the recent wave of misleading reports about the Royal Family the assertions in some newspapers this week directed specifically against the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh .
7 Despite the opportunities opened out from the late eighteenth century by an expanding grain trade , a marked increase in the land available , and a steady rise in labour and money dues extracted from the peasantry , the nobility found it difficult to make ends meet .
8 The Swiss pair sped down over the Third Ice Field , zoomed out from the sheer rockface beneath it and landed with a crunch on the Second Ice Field ; then , as limbs were torn from their bodies , they launched again off the cliff , landed on the First Ice Field , and again careened down the slope and zoomed out and down .
9 Immediately in front of him , Bigwig and Dandelion were staring out from the sheer edge of a high bank , and below the bank ran a stream .
10 A hole is made in the shell and a small cube of cells is carefully cut out from the posterior margin containing the polarizing region and grafted into the anterior margin of the limb bud of another embryo .
11 Van Gennep 's ideas on ‘ rites of separation ’ ( 1960 ) are a useful means of interpreting the social and spatial movements undertaken by the ethnographer as policeman , as he moves out from the early uniformed position of centrality described above .
12 Bush Vark 's First Day Out by Charles Fuge ( MacMillan , £6.95 ) Winner of The Mother Goose Award and the MacMillan Prize 1988 Three pairs of creaturely eyes stare out from the deep black inside covers of Bush Vark 's First Day Out , whetting young appetites for nocturnal mystery and the pleasurable horrors encountered by Charles Fuge 's cheery little vark , with his slippery passivity and plain good fortune .
13 The sun had got his hat on , so I took time out from the deep and meaningful stuff and studied my reflection in the glass .
14 Those with warm indoor quarters sought out their warmest nooks , while others , like the eagles , did their best to find refuge in their open shelters looking out from the frozen draughty shadows on to a bitter world .
15 In Britain you could not do better than to pick out from the varied products of the author John Wainwright , an ex-policeman , those of his books that are in the police procedural mode .
16 Ann was already half-way up the primitive stairway , a series of flat stones jutting out from the inner surface of the highest section of wall .
17 Those people whose families had moved out from the inner areas still retained some ties with relatives in the inner city , but clearly such ties are by definition weaker in quality than ties with immediate neighbours , and they were dismissed as relatively weak in our inner-city network analysis .
18 5 Pick out from the following those things which are horizontal and those which are vertical :
19 The surface of each of the dendrites which branch out from the neuronal cell body is covered with synapses — perhaps up to ten thousand in all — arising from the other neurons which thus make contact with them .
20 that first night of seven we went out from the warm
21 Goods sold in the shops can lead out from the immediate locality to the mills , workshops and factories of the industrial revolution , and indeed Empire produced goods will introduce a world horizon .
22 She had not realised they could reach out from the charmed circle of themselves .
23 Mr Birt himself has stressed his desire to transfer support services out from the central bureaucracy in London .
24 Hot light leapt out from the damascened chromium steel nozzle in a dazzling silver thread .
25 And as he poked around the undergrowth for hidden poachers , another shot would ring out from the far end of the water .
26 Out from the New Barnet footbridge comes the Deltic , the throb of the Napier engines very reassuring , it seems .
27 Among other things , that paper proposed that sewerage charges should be separated out from the new council tax in the same way as water charges are at present separately levied .
28 REUTERS is to make early payment of its 1992 final dividend so shareholders will not lose out from the new tax arrangements introduced in the Budget .
29 Some local people also work close to the church , daily setting out their stalls of fruit , vegetables or fish in the narrow alleyways , the vicoli , which spread out from the tiny square , no more than a broadening of the road really , before the church .
30 She read it out from the printed page .
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