Example sentences of "[adv] out [prep] the " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 Suddenly out of the murky haze , I saw one charging at me .
32 Once or twice I caught the N.C.O. staring at me with an expression of hate and disgust but he never maintained it when I stared back , and would look suddenly out of the window or at the papers in the portfolio he was carrying .
33 He came suddenly out of the blackness , looming large above them .
34 Suddenly out of the blue I received a tape from one of the members of the self-organizing group , the Liberation Network of People With Disabilities .
35 ‘ I could hear their croaking and their arguments and they came ever nearer until suddenly out of the mist I saw the grey shadow of a wing and wet spike of a beak .
36 The dark mouth of the alleyway between the high buildings loomed suddenly out of the mist at their side .
37 A bat may appear suddenly out of the dark close to a moth .
38 Over the crest at the High Cross , erupting suddenly out of the declivity beyond , and certainly from the Welsh gate , the hard drumming of hooves burst upon their ears , coming at a gallop .
39 Llewelyn caught her by the hand as she rose , with one of those warm , moving gestures of his that came so suddenly out of the very centre of his royalty , to join him by the heart with the simplest of those who moved about him .
40 Adam ran crashing downhill in a narrow dark ride , almost into the arms of a man who came striding suddenly out of the bushes , sword in hand .
41 And it 's unlikely that Chas 's grandfather got much out of the British Empire beyond , in all probability , two or three years spent serving as a soldier in India , two or three years off the dole queue .
42 Many teachers were unsure that they would get much out of the appraisal and felt that it would change little , especially in the light of probable cuts in spending in education .
43 Tom Bull-Dwyer 's middle managers stared unhappily out through the forest of tangled masts at the Needles , which seemed to be travelling past at a brisk walking pace .
44 In her defence , Outram explained that the teaching had led quite naturally out of the children 's questions .
45 They are ‘ normal events ’ , arising almost naturally out of the circumstances of the employment relationship itself : ‘ A wildcat can break out in perfectly normal conditions , and the structure of the relations between employers , trade unions , governments and workers guarantees that some strikes will grow from small beginnings into mighty struggles ’ ( p.241 ) .
46 Ashton pointed out that the late rise of formal banking in the country was due in part to the fact that it grew naturally out of the financial activities of men who " were content to describe themselves simply as merchants or traders , retailers or even inn-keepers " .
47 It 's a long way north — apparently out of the mainstream of the chaos which is afflicting Eastern Europe .
48 leer lopsidedly out of the window
49 Blanche had left a message for the sergeant to join her in the editor 's office of Inside Out on the fourth floor .
50 She told me how she thought the way to put Inside Out on the map was to do more hard , investigative stories .
51 Next , unscrew the old socket faceplate , ease the cables inside out of the mounting box , and disconnect the cable cores from the terminals .
52 Alyssia nodded and stepped inside out of the rain , allowing herself to be helped out of her jacket , and finding herself responding to the girl 's general comments about the weather .
53 He says , If the cinema should have nudity there , the statues should be inside out of the view of people .
54 Nothing could be heard above the noise of the engine , but I saw a lark spring skywards out of the heather , and another , a few minutes later , sink to its rest .
55 Then we left the Hominid Room and its lifeless fossils and walked together out of the Museum .
56 I shouted wildly , as we walked together out of the front door , to wait for the coach in the road .
57 In the past farm workers worked alongside each other in gangs or small groups far more than is customary today and meal breaks would also be taken together out in the fields .
58 Mrs Hawkins said : ‘ It does n't take long out of the workplace to lose confidence .
59 Even dressed as he now was , in a blue cotton jacket and trousers , he could never have been taken for an Italian , and since he was n't able to walk — he could only hop on one leg — or speak the language , he was hardly likely to remain free for long out in the open .
60 DAVID is staring tensely out of the window .
  Previous page   Next page