Example sentences of "to get out [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Spalding and Miss Robinson were sent to the lift , told to get out at the second floor , turn right , and go to the rooms numbered 207 and 208 .
2 She was already starting to feel battered by the increased level of the sound , and it was a relief to get out into the lower buzz and the cooler lights .
3 But I felt strongly that , like Dickens again , though not to the same extent , he needed occasionally to get out into the open : which is why he made his way down to Cornwall once or twice to see Ronald Duncan .
4 You ought to get out into the fresh air like Enfield and me …
5 She had to get out into the fresh air .
6 ‘ But I wanted to get out into the commercial world .
7 Lydia in the leading car was loth to hoot for fear of maddening the dogs and loth to get out for the same reason .
8 The teacher expressed concern that , although he could write quite well in English , he only did so when writing collaboratively with his friend ( who was absent ) ; she thought that collaboration might be becoming an avoidance strategy , to get out of the frustrating task of attempting to write in English .
9 How are we to get out of the present mess ?
10 It provides an opportunity to get out of the private rented sector .
11 ‘ It 's such a relief to get out of the starched uniform and the black stockings , ’ she said loudly so that the crowd around us could hear .
12 ‘ You tried to get out of the black hole with an ordinary rocket .
13 The probability is low for it to move a long distance at more than the speed of light , but it can go faster than light for just far enough to get out of the black hole , and then go slower than light .
14 Philip was thankful to get out of the crowded waiting-room .
15 but you do n't expect to get out of the ruddy
16 During take-offs and landings , some Flying Control personnel would occupy a caravan placed near the start of the runway being used , and they would fire green or red flares to let the aircraft know if they were cleared to land or take-off , and on this occasion one of the men was very quick off the mark , saw the crash and was immediately on the spot , helping the crew to get out of the burning aircraft .
17 But the show was all for nothing : there were no punters out there , except for a scattering of people , hunched into anoraks , hurrying home to get out of the persistent drizzle .
18 He is in fact opposing himself to the view that I was trying to get out of the older writers , namely that beauty is the name of some sort of spiritual being .
19 He is in fact opposing himself to the view I was trying to get out of the older writers , namely that ‘ beauty ’ is the name of some sort of spiritual being .
20 Something brown was fighting to get out of the bright green of the marsh .
21 At daybreak , though , they passed out into the ocean proper , still heating to the north-west to get out of the miserable cold .
22 To get out of the military training then given at boarding schools needed iron determination and met pressure from schoolmasters and unpopularity among boys .
23 He wanted to get out of the old activist scene and transform himself into a modern , successful businessman .
24 Assuming , of course , you 'll want to get out of the 944 S2 once in a while and take a look .
25 City shopkeepers thought this would be disastrous as the last thing that people cooped up in offices all day want to do is to plunge underground when at last they have a chance to get out in the fresh air .
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