Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] out [prep] [det] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He got asked out by that Kate . |
2 | As Clinton went from strength to strength , Bush failed to struggle out of that image of being weak . |
3 | Couple of chaps at the school got booted out for that stuff and I never did get round to it . ’ |
4 | ‘ League points are still important to us and nobody wants to miss out at this stage of the season . ’ |
5 | ‘ We want to find out in more detail how severe the bone loss is , what factors protect against it , and what factors make it worse . ’ |
6 | ‘ I expect to come out of these games with good results , ’ said Atkinson , before warning about hidden pitfalls in the long run in to the finishing line . |
7 | Thi this is something which has come out in several places I do n't know whether the members noted it , erm the er it also touches on , on , on what my colleague said earlier and the item in paragraph V er the assumption of the demand remain much as it is , heavily towards the South East particularly Gatwick . |
8 | The Scot who holed the winning putt in the match at The Belfry in 1985 laughed off rumours that he would need to pull out of this year 's match . |
9 | Learning theory has grown out of these strands . |
10 | The fear of violent crime has risen out of all proportion to the actual risk . |
11 | Yet the ‘ Song of Eärendil ’ does of course tell a story as well : how Eärendil tried to sail out of this world to a kind of Paradise , how he succeeded in the end by virtue of the ‘ Silmaril ’ , how this in turn led to his becoming a star , or rather the helmsman of a celestial boat in which the burning Silmaril appears to Middle-earth as a star . |
12 | Some foods , however , are seasonal , so when it comes to buying fruit , vegetables and salad , for example , you will need to look out for those products that are in plentiful supply at the time , and consequently more reasonably priced . |
13 | Reviewing the impact of the Gulf crisis on the world economy , the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund ( IMF ) , Michel Camdessus , assured the 41 LDCs that the IMF would help meet " the needs growing out of this crisis " . |
14 | The ceremony has died out in many areas over the past hundred years , so it was a good idea to revive it.There 's cider and singing and it 's good fun . |
15 | What I want to point out by this example is that the nature of a solution is determined by the prior definition of the problem that goes with it . |
16 | John Child ( 1984 , Chapter 1 ) has set out in some detail the requirements for the formulation and successful implementation of managerial plans . |
17 | A Director will cast this type of actress because he knows that is the kind of personality he wants brought out in this character , and he can rely on that actress to give just such a performance . |
18 | Now his club 's tighthead , he has gone out of this way to improve his scrummaging technique with specialist advice from among others , his boss , Sandy Carmichael , the 50-times capped Scottish and Lions tighthead Iain Milne ( ‘ immensely helpful ’ ) and Jim Telfer ( ‘ he is just the kind of coach I need because I can be a bit lazy and the fact that he just keeps at you all the time was very good for me ’ ) . |
19 | Les has gone out to Do-it-all B and Q or somewhere like that . |
20 | ‘ I ca n't wait to get out of this place , ’ she breathed . |
21 | I just ca n't wait to get out of this house . ’ |
22 | He wants to get out of that office , get out into the areas , find out what is going on and do something about the problem , or I will kick his backside for him . |
23 | To make it purposeful one of the first steps is to define carefully what children are expected to get out of this work . |
24 | So again if we look at all of these things across the top we 've got other things influencing across here when you go on holiday you , each of you in this room , you 'll probably have some idea beforehand of what you want to get out of that holiday . |
25 | and erm I think too you , if , if you can think perhaps for yourself , try and think out what you want to get out of this experience . |
26 | ‘ But I really want to get out of this Guitarist 's Guitarist scene . |
27 | ‘ I want to get out of this car , ’ she said through gritted teeth . |
28 | The kind of language game in which we talk about ‘ the back of ’ something is one in which that expression has meaning because it has evolved out of all kinds of activity in which ‘ backs ’ exist and can be shown to exist , because verified either by our own movement through space-time or by that of other persons , or both . |
29 | The world has changed out of all recognition since then . ’ |
30 | Circumscribed by the injunction — voiced or not , that the machines built around it should not pose a threat to IBM Corp 's proprietary product lines , the designers of the Power RISC created a chip that was heavily slewed towards scientific and technical applications — but the IBM world has changed out of all recognition since then and the RS/6000 is at least as widely used in commercial applications as in technical , while IBM is finding it increasingly hard to sell proprietary systems . |