Example sentences of "runs out [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He runs out into the corridor and collides with his friend Richard , who is carrying a chessboard , and the pieces scatter over the floor .
2 It should be damp enough to hold together when squeezed in the hand , but not so wet that water still runs out through the fingers .
3 Andy runs out across the ice .
4 ADRIAN DAVIES , the Welsh international rugby union outside-half , runs out with the Cambridge University soccer side to take on Oxford at Fulham this morning with the roar of Twickenham fresh in his memory .
5 The former Derry City striker set his sights on a move to a bigger club when his Omagh contract runs out at the end of the season .
6 Their lease runs out at the end of , I think it 's April , and we are going to receive an approach from Devon County Council , that we become involved in any extension of that as a council , and that perhaps we offer them rather more in the way of guidance , which I think , is their main need .
7 My contract runs out at the end of this trip .
8 Glennis Park , from The Comet , Hurworth , is on a temporary six-month lease which runs out at the end of June .
9 If the diaphragm is torn ( a wc may be difficult to flush ) , or the washer is worn , it may prevent the ballvalve from closing properly , and the cistern will continue to fill until it runs out of the overflow .
10 Its last hours are like those of Camembert ; it becomes a liquid smelly mess and runs out of the joint , leaving only a dirty mark behind .
11 Paul regularly runs out of the nursery to play ball in a busy street ; he has also run home by himself and was nearly hit by a lorry .
12 When she emerged , Rosa Luxemburg Platz was full of police , with lorries and water-cannon , who cordoned off the broad cobbled street that runs out of the town centre to the church .
13 The iron melts , picking up the correct amount of carbon from the coke , and runs out of the tap-hole at the bottom . ’
14 Somebody runs out of the crowd and hits Mowat on the back of the neck .
15 Once such a station runs out of the fuel supply at Ballymoney , it will want the lignite from the Ardboe/Moortown area to continue operating .
16 This numbering and lettering continues systematically till the alphabet runs out in the Book of Job and a new pattern begins with the Psalms : Aa Aa2 Aa3 Aa4 ns ns ns ns Bb Bb2 Bb3 Bb4 ns ns ns ns Cc Cc2 Cc3 Cc4 ns ns ns ns Dd Dd2 Dd3 Dd4 ns ns ns ns Ee Ee2 Ee3 Ee4
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