Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] [verb] [verb] out [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Having studied my chemistry in the steam age ’ , he writes , ‘ presumably I have missed out on the new ‘ water ’ . |
2 | Because I want to get on I try to keep out of trouble . |
3 | So I had to drive out past him , pull over to the other side of the road as much as possible to let him come through and the other cars come through , then I could come . |
4 | It really is I mean I I still feel guilty and it might sound daft to you , but I still feel guilty and what would my have done about I was down in London a few weeks ago for a meeting and I was coming back on the sleeper and I got the train to Euston and erm I came out at the wrong spot , so I had to walk out of Euston Underground and then round to go to Euston Station rather than going through |
5 | So I had to get out of bed and turn over . |
6 | So I had to get out of bed , get dressed and go down bloody Tilney again . |
7 | So I got turned out of there . ’ |
8 | So I have worked out by impeccable logic that , regardless of what you do , I must defect . |
9 | Especially as apparently you 'd gone out in a hurry and not taken a handbag . |
10 | Or perhaps you started to work out in the gym round the corner from the office . |
11 | So she had gone out with someone . |
12 | So you 've contracted out of serps ? |
13 | She wondered if the others were playing a joke on her : perhaps they 'd gone out for a walk ; perhaps , at this very moment , they were laughing at the thought of her waiting for a killer who would never come . |
14 | The talk at the Dôme and Rotonde struck him as far more amusing than his lessons at the Lycée and before long he had dropped out of school . |
15 | As his book is mainly about the south , perhaps it had died out in Andalusia , though even there I remember being startled by its male authority as I walked past a café in Seville . |
16 | Obviously he 'd gone out for cigarettes , or lunch — or perhaps — it was a sudden exciting hope — he was upstairs in John 's room , waiting for me there . |
17 | Or fix it so it gets ripped out by one of the machines ? ’ |
18 | Soon I had come out of the field and was walking along the path opposite where my home would be . |
19 | Finally I managed to get out of the harness and , luckily for me , the parachute that was dragging me along got tangled in a camel thorn bush . |
20 | I was copying all the afternoon ( Piero ) and I was in the sort of mood where normally I have to go out to the cinema or to a coffee-bar , anywhere . |
21 | Anyway we want to get out of that bloody awful flat . ’ |
22 | These er on when they look to be the cloisters of a cathedral , although , when you look through they seem to open out into street , so I 'm not quite sure exactly what sort of building it is . |
23 | Although she had rejected his dinner invitation , somehow he had come out of the scene the victor . |
24 | Eventually she had found out about it in the worst possible way . |
25 | Once more she stood gazing out over the garden , but this time everything seemed different — so different that when he took her gently into his arms it was so natural that she made no attempt to draw back . |
26 | I mean eventually eventually , sooner or later and it might be later if somebody else will still it has to come out of the profit margin . |
27 | ‘ Then gradually it began to get out of control . |
28 | For years whenever I 've got out of bed in the middle of the night — about whatever pursuit you get out of bed in the night for — my right ankle has made cracking noises , like kindling being snapped . |
29 | ‘ Whenever you wish to get out of here I will come and fetch you , ’ he said quietly . |
30 | Anyway , the Chinese seem excessively embarrassed and concerned about an incident of this type , and we have been kept under very careful supervision ( I am sure for our sakes , in their eyes ) whenever we have gone out of the hotel . |