Example sentences of "out from a " in BNC.
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1 | These same qualities are needed by lecturers , so it is no surprise that some excellent critical writings , such as many of John Ruskin 's books , were first read out from a lectern . |
2 | This mode of political religious action no longer starts out from a universal centre and figure , such as the papacy , but rather from the national or local church within the state , whose ‘ magistrates ’ — Calvin 's term for lay political leaders — are ideally Christians of moral rectitude , who perform this duty as one ordained by God . |
3 | Their value for the reader lies in enlarging or changing our perceptions , in helping us to break out from a deadening routine ; in short , the carnivalesque : ‘ The prophets of extremity put up a distorting mirror against our world — but one which properly attended to , can tell us something about that world , and about the possibilities of changing it , or changing ourselves . ’ |
4 | It is physiologically unsettling to gaze out from a dark patch into a brighter one . |
5 | Use a logical progression or a system radiating out from a central base . |
6 | As three cheers rang out from a few dozen loyal supporters gathered in the street below , Mr Kinnock took off his glasses , put them in his pocket , and gave a wistful smile for what might have been to the colleagues clustered around him . |
7 | This time hands reached out from a doorway and tugged at his trouser leg . |
8 | Suddenly something she had heard her daddy read out from a newspaper flashed back to her . |
9 | A rough-looking youth with long black unkempt hair and with a muffler about his neck suddenly sprang out from a disused barn standing close beside the lane . |
10 | Pre-baiting and baiting on the night you fish should , whenever possible , be carried out from a boat . |
11 | In the academic year 1980–81 , the school 's finances ran severely into the red and it had to be baled out from a special government reserve . |
12 | They can be up to 200ft ( 60m ) in diameter and are mostly constructed of stones , with a rim , and spokes radiating out from a central cairn . |
13 | The infantile , unmet scream may be repressed , either successfully or partially , at times breaking out from a normally controlled and reasonable adult . |
14 | Julie holds the doll up high ‘ to get all the water from inside her ’ and is fascinated to watch it stream out from a little hole in the doll 's big toe . |
15 | When a sizeable group is commissioned and sent out from a church large gaps remain . |
16 | Narrow alleys streak out from a market square , gay with canopy stripes , bookshops , boutiques , steamy little tea-shops , hat-shops , shoe-shops , curio- and card-shops , all pressed together , closing ranks to thousands of cyclists . |
17 | This sense of coping with the ‘ business of living ’ was one of the themes that came out from a study conducted by the writer and a colleague from the Tavistock Institute for a client in 1974 ( see Appendix One ) . |
18 | And despite the suits , which give them the air of ex-cons , just out from a time-warping jail sentence , they also seem younger than their 50 years apiece . |
19 | They knew that palladium soaks up deuterium ( a form of hydrogen found in heavy water ) like a sponge soaks up water , an electrical current from a battery forcing the deuterium atoms out from a solution of heavy water and into the spaces between the palladium atoms . |
20 | It was like the noise made by a steam locomotive pulling out from a station . |
21 | Each year , your ‘ profits ’ from the scheme are worked out from a formal table and the total of all these annual sums constitutes your pension . |
22 | Although Althusser 's interpretation of Marx can not , in the nature of things , live up to its own ideal of a theory which has no starting point , it follows the life-cycle of persons who are born into a web of relations and social conventions in starting out from a complex whole made up of practices . |
23 | Superimposing the pattern of a sound wave ( such as a person 's voice ) on to an electromagnetic wave ( such as the radio waves sent out from a telephone ) is simple and effective . |
24 | Here , a fourth reminder of something spewed out from a computer . |
25 | ‘ His underlying motive is that he wants to change the world , not so he can manage it , but so that he can make it a different place , ’ explains Charles Handy , who picked Gould out from a handful of students at the London Business School ‘ because he stood out in a group of people as by far the most interesting , and that was because he was determined to have control over his life ’ . |
26 | A rat suddenly darted out from a hole in the side of the drum and she had to bite back the scream that rose in her throat . |
27 | What is offered is not the results of detailed observation and validation , but an attempt to argue out from a comparison of , on the one hand , declared principles and objectives , and on the other hand , personal experience and published accounts , the fuller implications of resource-based learning in practice . |
28 | Instructions I copied out from a girls ' annual for 1954 . |
29 | As applied to advertising , it can , in theory , be used to separate out from a product 's sales the effects of different aspects of marketing activity , so as to assess the contribution of advertising . |
30 | The end-point of the walkable , or sometimes scramble-able section of the Gorges is at a waterfall , where the water shoots out from a hole in the rock on the left and falls sixty or seventy feet into the stream . |