Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] out from the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I set out the sunset quickly starting with the yellow around the sun and growing darker and more towards blue as I moved out from the centre , using a mixture of water and ox gall to make the paint stay wet . |
2 | When I fly out from the nest over the moors to its great and awesome cliff and gyre on the winds out over the sea then can I call myself a Wrath eagle . ’ |
3 | So flustered was I , in fact , that I became entangled with the bicycles in the hall ( my sons always keep them there , and other things being equal I usually get past them without too much difficulty ) , and I arrived in the dining-room even more distraught than I set out from the study . |
4 | A dip in the hill , much like those at Sulber Nick and Kirkby Nick , led over the crest by an outcrop and as I walked out from the dip I saw ahead of me Raydale with , to my left , Semer Water and Addlebrough behind it . |
5 | ‘ I looked out from the window from where the man had fallen and what I saw was unbelievable , ’ he said . |
6 | The main points that I picked out from the game affecting the law changes are : |
7 | A good many boys and girls had joined the crowd now and shouts of laughter broke out as a few of them came out from the gate in the kitchen-garden wall , their hands full of ripe peaches , their chins dripping with juice . |
8 | Heartened by the thought that all the rumblings within her were no more than spasms of ill-digested curry , she walked out from the Khyber fort that was her home , and with my father beside her , tapped her chilblains to the pipes of the Black Watch and admired the wild Pathans cleaning their rifles high on the hillside . |
9 | ‘ I 'm coming to Pollensa with you , ’ she called out from the kitchen as she put the kettle on for coffee . |
10 | And then , when she looked out from the window of her room in the Palings Hotel , there he was , a star performer modest amid the crowd , the Great Zeno , walking past with his twin , Luke Mallen . |
11 | Could you walk out from the Embassy ? |
12 | IT 'S that time of year when there seems to be a party every other night and it takes a little extra imagination to make you stand out from the crowd . |
13 | And yet she held her breath as she leaned out from the cover of the first-floor corridor , and hung cautiously over the oak rail . |
14 | To the right , Ajayi knew , If she leaned out from the balcony ( which she did not like to do as she was a little afraid of heights ) , she would be able to see the quarries , and the start of the thin , also snow-covered and treeless line of stunted hills . |
15 | Slowly , each movement a vast , unexplored continent of pain , she pushed out from the steps and hobbled past him . |
16 | We all like to think we stand out from the crowd and , in the past , the face has been seen as the key to unlocking our identity . |
17 | ‘ So we set out from the beginning to be ‘ author-friendly ’ . |
18 | which was that four point one was n't included in the papers that went to staff consultative , which was the general list of things that we pulled out from the brainstorm last time . |
19 | We stood out from the rest , who would be played by girls or women — supers as they were called — hastily chosen early on the Monday of our arrival in the town . |
20 | Can we can we can we find out from the teacher whether in fact the school actually gets a a our information leaflet . |
21 | I felt the corporeal elephant on whose back my world was supported amble effortlessly along , rather that it being necessary for me to lean out from the howdah of my head and goad him . |
22 | What is it about them that makes them stand out from the rest ? |
23 | They rode out from the stables in comparative silence , the groom a little way behind as befitted his position . |
24 | They found out from the crew that the ship had been boarded the night before a few miles out from Gdańsk by a Russian naval vessel and that a Polish passenger had been arrested and taken off . |
25 | When they drove out from the castle , Johnson found little in Dunbui 's yellow rock to engage his attention , other than the remarkable fact that the Guillemot , known locally as the Coot , while as small as a duck , lays eggs as large as those of a goose . |
26 | As their numbers grew so they spread out from the areas still occupied and the abandoned warrens slowly began to be reoccupied . |
27 | They spread out from the Thing like a tide ; panels lit up like little skies full of stars , big lights in the ceiling flickered on , there was a distant banging and fizzing as electricity was woken up , and the air began to smell of thunderstorms . |
28 | It was noon before they had completed the morning 's tasks , and as they came out from the buildings to go across to the house , the snow had ceased to fall . |
29 | She pulled her loom out from the corner and put a stool in front of it . |
30 | Can certain individuals be directed in such a way that they stand out from the mass because they are the tellers of the story , the chief exponents in the drama or theme ? |