Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] out as [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If this process was properly carried out as a matter of public law , then the consequential private law right of the plaintiff was simply a right to the accommodation which the council had decided to be suitable .
2 If you generally only go out as a treat , a commitment to healthy eating will mean that you want to choose dishes that build on the good work you have carried on at home .
3 A recent academic study compared the training available to young people in this country and that available to young people in Germany — for so long held out as the model that all other countries should follow in this regard .
4 Thus the very vibrancy of Impressionist or Pointillist paintings may well result from the discrimination of thousands of similar bits of colour data , all emerging as dots of similar hue , brightness , size or shape so that each momentarily stands out as a mini-figure against all the rest .
5 They are often found where hard corals have largely died out as a result of one of the above processes .
6 So I 'm out and about and quite often I go and visit people in their own homes out of the back and beyond of nowhere cos I just called out as a result of that and I suddenly thought I I 'm highly vulnerable to them I could be subject to attack like anybody else , how will I protect myself ?
7 Now 36 , he has 28 years ' hockey experience behind him and still turns out as a defender for Milan , training two or three times a week and playing in the Italian hockey league , which started a new season at the end of February .
8 Still hanging out as a cocktail waitress ? ’
9 Within the cargo terminal the Post Office occupies a double module specially fitted out as a sorting room .
10 S1 always stood out as a unit and these boys , who were always together , were known by everybody in the sample .
11 Fullback Marty Roebuck could also miss out as an ankle operation is likely to sideline him for six to seven weeks .
12 This will probably come out as a mixture of physical symptoms , environmental , and individual stresses .
13 You only had to compare the opening version of Zobi la Mouche ( lumpy drums and shuddering halts ) with the neatly turned performance eventually wheeled out as an encore , to realise how this is a machine which runs the better for being well-oiled .
14 But it 's actually now made out as an adoption of the dog .
15 He often came out as a bit of a bighead and , accused of this at the time , took a tape-measure and agreed that his head had indeed expanded by one-eighth of an inch since leaving Wales .
16 The Teddy Boys also coexisted with compulsory military service — which is so often wheeled out as a panacea for the troubles of youth — and national service was even condemned in the 1950s as ‘ a positive adverse influence on young people ’ because of the way in which it interrupted the transition from school to work and encouraged an ‘ eat , drink and be merry ’ philosophy .
17 Tony Bottoms ( 1983 : 176–7 ) has compared this notion to that of the ‘ sin-bin ’ in ice hockey : the player who has committed a foul is excluded ( or ‘ disqualified ’ ) from the game for a while and symbolically marked out as an offender , but after a term of fixed duration the player is allowed to rejoin the game as a full participant or ‘ requalified subject ’ .
18 Bug fixes are quite often sent out as a matter of course to registered users — non-registered users might never get to hear about them , and be stuck with bugged software .
19 Sue Baring , finding it difficult to conceal her disappointment , thanked a similar list of people before ending : ‘ I do think the result is uncomfortable for many sections of this society and I hope I will be free to fight for all those who may well lose out as a result of this election . ’
20 These materials then flatten out as a disc surrounding the young star — to ultimately condense into planets .
21 In the original portrait it could be vaguely made out as a kind of craggy wild place ; in this photographic reproduction it was no more than thickenings and glimmerings in the black .
22 Instead , close your eyes , take a few deep breaths , then breathe out as a sigh and relax into the experience .
23 It was painstakingly worked out as a way of preventing some women — usually those whose privileged access to higher education had given them confidence and articulacy in public speaking — from dominating and silencing others .
24 All the analysis ignores the fact that the product that is intrinsically the best almost never comes out as the winner in the market : in the immortal words scriptwriter Vincent Lawrence put into Mae West 's mouth , when it comes to the market success of MS-DOS or the IBM Personal Computer standard , goodness had nothing to do with it .
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