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

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1 Only out on the water with Pedro panting in the prow had she dared to admit that for the first time in her life she had felt herself a prisoner at the Hall .
2 She told me how she thought the way to put Inside Out on the map was to do more hard , investigative stories .
3 There is something very disturbing about a benefit system which will prop up Mr Deaves until he gets back on his business feet , yet is reluctant to help people who are literally out on the streets .
4 Much to my surprise I was soon out on the water like a regular Captain Pugwash .
5 I shaved and showered , clipping two seconds off the record , and was soon out on the highway heading for Faketown .
6 You two looked very cosy , chatting away out on the deck .
7 They were still far away out on the woods — still lost .
8 ‘ Dr. Stevie 's already out on the course .
9 When I got there they were already out on the beach sizing up the surf .
10 Some were already out on the lake , quiet and dabbling .
11 But the latest Rainbird game being played here — First Contact , just out on the Atari ST — is packed in a green box instead of the blue ones loved by BT .
12 ‘ I 'll just out on the porch in a skirt with a shotgun and a torn umbrella , and if you hit your baseball into my yard you 'll never see it again . ’
13 In a sense , the Jury 's still out on the Times cos you 'd have to look at it over say a three of four month period .
14 Two other British players , Steve Richardson and Barry Lane , were in joint third place with New Zealander Greg Turner at 12 under par all three still out on the course .
15 Joe was still out on the street at the other end of the bar , arm still raised , already way out of date .
16 Some have been designated as sites of special scientific interest ( SSSI ) , but these stop at the low-water mark , allowing rubbish dumping further out on the water .
17 Once out on the highway the apprehension of the verderers grew less .
18 Now that was the time when first daylight on Bristol , and we heard the bombers go up , and I went home out on the tram car , and there were the young ones just screaming down into the city , I said , ’ good grief , those bombers have hit something ’ , and it was Filton Aeroplane , people had direct hits on shelters you see .
19 Albert Popple was always out on the allotment or in the Lamb and Flag in the mornings .
20 My brother Dickon , he 's always out on the moor .
21 However , conditions for the time of the year seemed favourable and I was in hopeful mood as I rowed carefully out on the meadow side to a drop-off at about 70 yards I knew to be there .
22 Another crowd of gilded aristocrats and gentlemen , also out on the town and also half cut , recognising Stair 's party , and Havvie Blaine in particular , decided to enliven his celebrations by staging an impromptu rugger game .
23 They loved the sound of swishing the sheaves made as they were stooked , the clash of the tresses of hard grain against grain , the sight of the rich ears of corn leaning delicately out on the shoulders of the stooks .
24 But these are frustrating conditions for a dedicated drifter who does n't feel entirely happy unless at least one drifting vane is bobbing somewhere out on the horizon .
25 He probably lies somewhere out on the Steppes , together with so many of his companions .
26 they 'll fall right out on the floor among the
27 According to what it says in books , you have to tread carefully right out on the edges of each step , where they are fixed against the wall .
28 All at once , from quite far out on the water , there came an outburst of noise — frightened shouts , and a sound as if someone had fallen in .
29 far out on the water .
30 That 's the nocturnal Manx shear waters landing all around you , home again after many hours far out on the ocean .
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