Example sentences of "[noun] of [noun] out [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Being organised can take a great deal of worry out of a single life .
2 Mrs McDougall was in her kitchen taking a batch of bread out of the oven .
3 This explained why it had not been possible to get four separate channels of sound out of the record .
4 The human females were taking trays of food out of the wall .
5 Her ability to achieve consensus in sensitive decisions was never at the price of individual promise or doctrinaire cost-cutting , and she was a resolute opponent of any moves to take books of quality out of the teaching of English .
6 I 've got a knackered left arm where the car went over it ; they took a piece of bone out of the shoulder , so there 'll need to be a lot of physio on it .
7 Oh God do n't wan na do my fucking musical , I 've got ta make a flipping piece of music out from a stupid scale .
8 He stood up and went over to an escritoire and took a piece of paper out of a drawer .
9 Harvey got a piece of canvas out of the front of the car and then pike took his overcoat off and they wrapped the coat into the canvas and strapped it up very tight on a long strap , the other end of which they fixed to the belt of Ralph pike 's overalls .
10 , Newcastle-upon-Tyne City Council has announced plans to take more than 3,000 acres of land out of the green belt in order to facilitate economic regeneration in the area .
11 Mick Feeney , a Barlinnie delegate , seconding the motion , said : ‘ The unit was of great benefit to the service because we could get the ringleaders of trouble out of the system for a while .
12 Guards should properly refer to ‘ switching on the darks ’ , since what they call lights seem expressly designed to suck all traces of illumination out of the carriage , casting shadows into every corner .
13 Er , fifteen er , schemes that were actually funded by the Department of Health out of a hundred and fifty bids , and the funding available , a hundred and fifty thousand pounds per year , er , up to the period er , ending thirty first of March ninety five .
14 ‘ At nights , ’ said the Canadian , ‘ it was so cold that you could n't sleep at all , and about dawn you 'd hear the shots as they knocked off that day 's quota of Frenchmen out in the yard . ’
15 I quickly exhaust my quota of courage out on the roads when seated on something flighty .
16 The nationalists promised to end the drain of resources out of the country , to industrialize in order to supply home consumption .
17 Five minutes footage a day is good going and they use only 1 foot of film out of every 15 feet shot .
18 Purchase of Target out of a group of companies
19 He got one last bit of mileage out of the Hiss case .
20 A bit of activity out on the water catches my attention next and I bring the ‘ scope out ; it is a small party of long-tailed duck in their handsome winter plumage , the long tail-streamers of the drakes showing clearly as they display to the females .
21 ‘ If there was a death in the family our custom was to take a bit of crepe out to the bee-skeps after sunset and pin it on them .
22 The comparative simplicity of the equipment and the fact that it 's so easy to transport and launch has got loads of newcomers out onto the water .
23 The birds squawked and flapped , and the very top of the bush seemed to be flicked by an invisible hand which knocked a few shreds of leaf out into the air .
24 A master of ceremonies is needed to dispatch successive pairs of defendants out of the room , in order to keep the game going continuously .
25 She could make a unique work of art out of the simplest dance , as fragments filmed in the 1920s show .
26 In Hampstead : Building a Borough , 1650–1964 ( 1974 ) Professor F. M. L. Thompson has shown how the old settlement preserved its isolated character well into the nineteenth century because it lay off the main lines of communication out of the capital .
27 Dame Sirith has 397 lines of dialogue out of a total of 450 .
28 I must also say that I resent the tendency of the Act to line the pockets of lawyers out of the tragic situations of families and children in trouble .
29 Canon Frances Briscoe ( York ) said failure to pass the legislation to the grassroots would be a ‘ betrayal of women out in the dioceses , waiting in the wings ’ .
30 David took two quarter bottles of champagne out of the mini-bar , and collected two tooth mugs .
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