Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv prt] of [noun] [conj] [pron] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Erm It all gets mixed up of course because there 's , there 's there 's erm erm Russia which is seen as a power , you know the reactionary power .
2 No he 'd love that though cos he could come round and go shit I 've just come out of rehab and everyone would go oh wow man you must be really drugged out .
3 It 'll change as you get older erm you wo n't necessarily just have that all the time we used to run these courses for students who had just come out of college and they were joining their company to work for the first first time and we used to do this and we used to find that many of the people who had just taken out the job for the first time had very very flat scores .
4 At the time , Mr Reynolds himself had looked out of curiosity and everything seemed to be in order .
5 His coach had been parked out of sight while his white saddle horse had been tethered to a post at the roadside so that the passing soldiers would think their Emperor was riding to war instead of being carried in upholstered comfort .
6 He has dropped out of school because he is not interested in studies .
7 At least she 's dropped out of touch and I suspect that 's where she is . ’
8 In order to get a true comparison between the firms ( and accordingly between the contributions , both capital and income generating , of their partners ) it may be necessary : ( 1 ) to revalue capital assets to a common date ; ( 2 ) to bring in the profits from the disposal of any property not required by the merged firm ; ( 3 ) to devise some means of compensation if goodwill is to be written out of account where it has previously been treated as an asset in which the partners have a share ; ( 4 ) where work in progress features in the accounts of one of the firms , to eliminate it by billing or to write it off against the capital accounts of that firm 's partners ; ( 5 ) to settle how bad debts are to be treated post-merger , either charged generally against the new firm or separately against the partners of the old firms ; ( 6 ) to write off the value of old fixtures and fittings ; ( 7 ) to revise profit and loss accounts to a common accounting date .
9 Much of the Forestry Commission 's early planting was certainly crude and insensitive , but in recent years it has become more attentive to its landscaping responsibilities ( not least because the Forestry Commission has found that there is money to be made out of tourism if it does so ) and now employs landscape consultants to advise on its planting policies .
10 cos it 's made out of aluminium and you 've got to put the glass in , it 's really expensive I tell you
11 Laing admits that the Spanish company was bought out of desperation and it cost United Biscuits dearly .
12 The following morning , I 'd just got out of bed when he started barking to get out .
13 It did n't really happen overnight , I guess , but through the MainMan News , MainMan kind of mushroomed into this enormous spending machine that really got out of control and I think was a very destructive influence on everyone that was involved . ’
14 Kicked out of Oundle before I had a chance to get to grips with the first line of the Aeneid , if you want to know the truth .
15 Bruce 's forces were defeated first in Methven wood by the English , and then beside Loch Tay by Comyn 's uncle , the Lord of Lorn The king 's sister and the Countess of Buchan who had crowned him were dragged out of sanctuary where they had been sent for safety , and exhibited in cages hanging from castle walls at Roxburgh and Berwick .
16 Though the prestige of Aldfrith 's descent from the Uí Néill will not have been negligible , he was born out of wedlock and there must have been many legitimate sons of other Northumbrian lords who claimed descent from Ida .
17 He 'd branched out of mod and his look and outlook had changed little for years .
18 I 've been in love and fallen out of love so I know how it feels to have been divorced without the formalities . ’
19 For this reason the golfball picture of the planet , with regular internal layers and smooth , uniform demarcation zones , has fallen out of favour as it has encouraged what are probably quite wrong estimates of temperatures at the core .
20 Mrs Ross ’ s condition had deteriorated ; she had fallen out of bed and it seemed she might have suffered a further stroke .
21 There were two groups in East Africa who had a direct interest in discrediting Masai administration and suggesting that officials were ‘ soft ’ on the Masai : these were , most importantly , the white settlers who wanted Masai land for farming , and enthusiasts for wildlife conservation who wanted the Masai driven out of areas where their interests were believed to conflict with those of game .
22 Indeed , BA would almost certainly have pulled out of negotiations if it had thought a referral was likely .
23 I do n't know whether I 've spoken out of place because I 'm not a member of Salisbury park but on the assumption that erm that we would have to share in the
24 He 's run out of plaster and he 's got an urgent call somewhere where he thinks he 'll need it .
25 ‘ I 've run out of money and I 'm trapped with the children and I do n't like it here .
26 They 've run out of ink or something
27 See we 've run out of buns cos you had one yesterday and that makes one er , there was two there
28 He is a man of about fifty-five , with a quick ‘ nervous manner , as if he had pressing engagements elsewhere , which seems unlikely : the university has run out of steam and its faculty members are all jumping ship , if they can .
29 ‘ I left at the right time as I felt the band had run out of ideas and it was becoming motivated by the wrong things .
30 And anything that was to be ruled out of order or they did it .
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