Example sentences of "[pers pn] [modal v] [verb] out [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 But I I should come out in great welts soon and start looking like an American werewolf in London .
2 I got back , I could find out for certain who had told who .
3 But I can find out for definite later on .
4 Mike trying to cover up his unease about staying in so she could go out by patronising sarcasm .
5 This was followed by an interview between the President and Von Papen : and I can not help thinking that , during their conversation together , the former must have assured the latter that , so long as she could hold out against Allied demands , Turkey would abstain from hostile action towards Germany .
6 ‘ That you will find out in due course ; now go and make your arrangements and be ready by five . ’
7 Here she can look out over old haunts from her tenth storey office .
8 It is still early and you can drive out towards Apt and branch off across the Lubéron .
9 I guess we 'll find out for sure what Joseph 's made of here in Cochin-China . "
10 ‘ Ah 'm Iain , this is Nils , Mrs Sunderby is Iris — no , better call her Eeris , she responds to that much quicker — ye 're Peter , or Pete for short , and what the hell we call Gómez we 'll find out in due course .
11 Before we 'd fall out over stupid things and not speak to each other for a day .
12 Er in a competitive situation , the Rickmansworth tender w w w was a , a an example of that , we actually had a contract document which is about as thick and complicated as one of the contract documents that we would put out for civil engineering physical work to er er a contractor .
13 Would you say that if this pattern were to be repeated all through the night we would run out of dry-roasted nuts just before the important watershed of midnight , whereas we would still have a surplus of the ordinary variety ?
14 It is of course true that the human body , its associated natural processes , and those of other living organisms , provide natural models that offer a finite range of symbolic themes which we can pick out in different cultures .
15 They may , for instance , be unaware that they are being spoken to unless referred to by name , and they can miss out on humorous incidents which make the rest of the class laugh .
16 Moving people has also been tried , for instance by giving housing subsidies to poor people so that they can move out of inner-city slums and rent new homes in the suburbs .
17 This will enable us to ascertain whether pointing is an intrinsically social , communicative act or whether it may develop out of other non-social behaviour , such as reading .
18 However , although it is the ideal course of action for John — allowing him to take advantage of some of the excellent schemes around at the moment as well as releasing cash that has been building up in his home over the years — he should look out for excessive costs that a remortgage can incur .
19 It is not thought appropriate to say that the modern economy requires such an underclass , and certainly not that it must reach out to other countries to sustain and refresh it .
20 It 'll come out in good time ! ’
21 If the marble is not moving fast enough it will run out of kinetic energy before it reaches the top , come to a momentary halt , and then roll back down again the way it came .
22 But in summer the male ruff is an amazing-looking bird with a variously coloured ‘ ruff ’ of long feathers round its neck which it can fan out in nuptial display .
23 It can single out for special treatment the special aggravating features of a crime .
24 Once the patient is used to getting out of the house , he can go out for social occasions .
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