Example sentences of "which [verb] out [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It follows the company 's jobs-for-life Rover Tomorrow deal signed earlier this year , which ruled out compulsory redundancies .
2 The spatial differentials are , however , most marked at the local scales which pick out residential clusters with distinctive social mixes .
3 The tenant should be careful also not to agree a too restrictive period of time in which to carry out remedial works .
4 The most spectacular known to me in Europe were the great rock-falls that occurred from tile sheer face of Ramnefjell ( Raven Mountain ) into Loenfjord in central Norway in 1905 and 1936 , producing waves which wiped out local communities and carried a steamer a considerable distance inland .
5 And Jesus said that God 's dominion , the rule of Heaven , is something like a mustard seed which starts out tiny and ends up big .
6 I had a beauty I had a run there I had about four in a row which came out whole , but now I 'm getting crushed nuts
7 ‘ We are looking for things like active galactic nuclei which put out tremendous energies in neutrinos . ’
8 Ruth was a living plant which put out stained-glass flowers .
9 She seemed to have more energy as a result , but she developed nettle-rash and a vaginal discharge , which turned out to-be due to thrush ( Candida infection ) .
10 THE incidence of sexually-transmitted diseases among Plymouth 's prostitutes has been cut by Britain 's only mobile Aids clinic , which hands out free condoms and needles to intravenous drug users .
11 She had a leather suitcase which bore the remains of labels from pre-war Oriental hotels , a hatbox and an immense carpet bag which sighed out little puffs of dust every time it was set on the ground .
12 She had a bun of hair at her nape from which stuck out carved hairpins , thinner than split matchsticks .
13 A motion was proposed and passed at that meeting , which set out general suggestions concerning a possible way forward .
14 Occasionally governments have opened up a discussion by publishing a ‘ Green Paper ’ which set out alternative possibilities .
15 The deposits occur as massive bodies of ore pierced by occasional hot vents of ‘ black smokers ’ , which pour out high temperature solutions , rich in metals .
16 In ‘ Questions of genre ’ he has returned to such fundamental terms of genre poetics as expectation , verisimilitude institutional discourses and practices specific to cinema ; his essay on the American war film breaks down the homogeneous generality of a single film genre into particular typologies of form , structure and discourse which play out particular regimes of power and ideology .
17 The DoE spokesman said : ‘ This issue is governed by the Waste Collection and Disposal Regulation ( 1992 ) , which sets out various categories of waste that are lifted .
18 ‘ This is governed by the Waste Collection and Disposal Regulation ( 1992 ) , which sets out various categories of waste which are lifted .
19 There is a distinction in principle between a book which sets out original ideas , and justifies them ( a MONOGRAPH ) , and a book whose primary function is to distil and tell you what other people 's ideas are ( a TEXTBOOK ) .
20 This Bill , which sets out detailed mechanisms for settling disputes , could be passed early next week .
21 The acceptance of a contract which sets out detailed conditions of service , hours worked and parents met is unlikely to provide the flexibility that is required for schools to respond quickly , humanely and sympathetically to family needs .
22 The board was reconstituted with a majority of key employers from within the industry , its operations and financial systems have been restructured and a strategic plan has been produced which sets out clear objectives against which the success of the board 's actions can be judged .
23 Here Barnett is opening up a whole store of perceptions , aims , and criticisms which marked out important features of the class relationship in the period ( and which were also relevant to age relations ) , such as the alleged pauperization of self-respect among the poor ; their grasping of excitement ; and the superiority of middle-class culture which made contact between the classes so crucial .
24 The impersonal and durable character of these rights was highlighted during the last years of Louis VII 's reign , in the use in charters of the phrase corona regni ( the crown of the kingdom ) , a phrase which marked out royal rights from princely by asserting their value to the kingdom as a whole .
25 The contract to service the ski jump is a big boost for A5 Hydraulics a co-operative five-man company which bought out Agricultural and Industrial Hydraulics for £70,000 last year .
26 Nearly two decades later his installation Art Show at the Centre Pompidou foregrounded figures with tape decks for hearts , which gave out phoney art jargon , with hot air literally coming out of the figures ’ vents ( Rickey 1983 ) .
27 Under the Brady plan , hard-up countries which carry out structural economic reforms that meet the approval of the International Monetary Fund qualify not only for partial debt forgiveness by the banks but also , in some cases , for new money .
28 Their waste , or " tailings " , contains a high proportion of sulphur which leaches out toxic metals .
29 In fact , looking back at the affair , the only thing which stood out unequivocal and substantial was my great whitebound digit which had hovered constantly over the scene , almost taking on a personality and significance of its own .
30 Occupation is never more than a shorthand for allocating social class , which leaves out other key dimensions : your education , or the house you live in , for instance .
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