Example sentences of "[conj] [noun pl] [pron] [verb] out [prep] " in BNC.

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1 However , in Smith v South Wales Switchgear Ltd [ 1978 ] 1 WLR 165 the House of Lords held that a clause in a contract for services requiring the contractor to indemnify the employer against " any loss , claim or proceedings whatsoever arising out of or in the course of the execution of the order " did not apply to require an indemnity in respect of injuries caused by the employer 's negligence .
2 The fact that trajectories which wander out of the region may later return ( after wandering chaotically near the strange attractor ) is of no concern ; we are concerned only with trajectories that remain forever within the small region , and a strange collection of these is removed .
3 They claim to see each other less than couples who go out to work , meeting for the occasional cup of coffee in the kitchen .
4 Around the main harbour are the resort 's bars , restaurants and shops which spill out onto promenades , but perhaps more magnetic is medieval Malcesine .
5 Quick-growing root vegetables such as radishes and carrots which grow out of sight can be compared for size when they are pulled at various times .
6 The categories and concepts he hammered out in his attack on Idealism — many of them of course drawn from Idealism itself , but refashioned by him — are by no means wholly adequate to serve the restatement of Christian theology , and could indeed lead to the emergence of philosophies quite alien to Christianity itself .
7 Journalists and producers who fell out of favour were ‘ put on the shelf ’ ( ‘ mis au placard ’ ) — thereby accentuating what was already part of broadcasting mythology : in the 1980S as in the 1940S , key managerial , editorial and programming appointments and dismissals — who 's ‘ in ’ and who 's ‘ out ’ — were attributed as much ( or more ) to political as to professional factors .
8 Victoria Place home to Seacombe 's ferry terminal radiated life , echoing to the daily sound of ferries , buses and trains which bustled out across the region .
9 They live on hares and badgers they catch out in the pampas . ’
10 An unspoken agreement grants peace and prosperity , respectively , to scholars and publishers who stay out of the public debate .
11 Each of the parties further recognises that , by reason of my acting in such capacity , I will , in performing my duties hereunder ( but subject to doing so honestly and in good faith ) , be immune from all actions and proceedings whatsoever arising out of or in connection with my appointment hereunder .
12 For of course the Pacific is still influenced by the Atlantic that once dominated the world : the ties that bound the world together yesterday — personified by the men and women who came out from the West to trade or to peddle religion , to colonize , annex , smuggle or fight — these ties still exist today , though more weakly , with less influence and fewer and fewer people enrolled in the process .
13 This was indeed a triumph ; like most of those who make predictions , Owen got some animals wrong later ( identifying as mammals what turned out to be reptilian remains ) , but connoisseurship is a matter of probabilities rather than certainties .
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