Example sentences of "[adv prt] of the [noun sg] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 GRIEVING father Daniel Meinertzhagen demanded a tightening up of the licensing laws after yesterday 's inquest on his daughter .
2 Cash has flowed out of the money markets into the stockmarket , well before there is any clear sign of economic recovery .
3 We took about £150m out of the operating companies over a couple of years
4 Xanthe looked out of the taxi windows at the throng swinging down the pavement , the broad plane leaves shifting and the jackets still unfastened , panels loose , in these first mild days of autumn .
5 Immediately the little mountain tribesmen , who seemed to have stepped straight out of the sepia photographs in his history book , began unloading the baggage , and Joseph saw them take their crossbows and arrows from the carts and carry them to their own huts a hundred yards away along the riverbank …
6 Some hours after the alleged attack , Sharon McLean ran out of the Peace Gardens in Holt Street , near Wrexham police station , and pretended that she had just discovered the body , the jury was told .
7 He 's got to go on for another ten lines , piling on more and more out of the way references to classical paradises so that he can give it all away for God .
8 Many are dispatched on missions by the lord of the Phoenix Throne and can be found leading armies in strange and out of the way parts of the world .
9 Apparently the town grew some centuries ago out of the winter quarters of Ivan Pokhabov who established a post at Irkutsk to collect a fur tax from the Buriats , the fur-trapping natives .
10 From somewhere out of the back ranks of the fighters , Samson rose up , towering head and shoulders over the rest of the mob .
11 Exley vows : ‘ I 'll be back ’ Amateur By JEFF TODHUNTER ALAN Exley bowed out of the ABA championships in the national quarter finals at Gateshead Leisure Centre because , possibly , he showed his opponent too much respect .
12 ( 1 ) The defendants have a contractual right to retain out of the mortgage funds in hand their costs , charges and expenses , including the receivers ' remuneration , on an indemnity basis .
13 Add a little coloured royal icing oozing out of the tube mouths for extra authenticity .
14 British troops shepherded them out of the monastery buildings into 19 Warrior armoured vehicles .
15 So that when want numbers of non-directed peasants began to spill out of the disaster areas in the early summer of 1921 , the Central Committee of the Communist Party ordered its guberniia counterparts to put a stop to migration ‘ since the flight of the peasants … will ruin entirely our economic life ’ .
16 Bearing in mind that Mr Steel probably on his own admission has said he 's been a bit late out of the starting blocks in order to make his bid for a review of the allocations , er I mean how do you feel in response to that ?
17 The sound echoed out of the mosque towers across the town .
18 She fiddled with the strap of her small black leather shoulder-bag , and turned to stare out of the glass doors at the hot afternoon scene beyond .
19 I remember on one occasion I dashed out of the television studios to the bookshop in Norwich without a trace of make-up on and these kids fell off their bikes , saying ‘ Ugh , in real life you do n't look at all like you do on TV . ’ ’
20 Importantly , Gramsci did not believe that consent was produced as the result of a ruling class conspiracy to hoax the workers ; for him , ideologies arose out of the material realities within which human beings live and work .
21 Research is spilling out of the broking houses by the shovelful , but often straight into the fund manager 's bin .
22 This engine was originally used for pumping water out of the mine workings at Griff Colliery , Nuneaton , from 1723 , and was later moved to other sites , ending up at Hawkesbury Junction on the Coventry Canal , where it remained in use until 19 13 .
23 Substantial payments were made out of the Forest revenues for these and other purposes relating to the maintenance and upkeep of the castle .
24 On the top floor she stood looking out of the dormer windows across the London skyline , and then downwards through the burgeoning green tracery of sycamore trees to where daffodils were blooming and a woman and a child were feeding some pigeons .
25 The Wootton and Widgery proposals came to hand at the right time ; there were pressures from bodies such as the Magistrates ' Association and the Justices ' Clerks ; while the prospect of legislation prompted a clearing out of the pigeon holes of Whitehall .
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