Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv] of [art] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Thus , many users prefer to stay hidden regardless of the problems that this might cause their families or themselves . |
2 | He should have been booted out of the Olympics and told to race at a more apt venue . |
3 | Before Mrs Carroll could stop her Benny had galloped out of the shop and up the road towards the convent . |
4 | The Frenchman scrambled out of the river and stopped in front of her . |
5 | Somebody called , ‘ Tea 's ready , ’ and the bathers scrambled out of the water and began drying themselves . |
6 | Three youths scrambled out of the car and ran off , leaving her dying in the road . |
7 | The party appointments came after the leadership had authorised a statement formally apologising to the Czechoslovak people for leading the country into its latest crisis , before they were hustled out of the building because the cleaners wanted to go home . |
8 | Then in 1650 Vane was voted out of the position and Hutchinson succeeded him , holding it from the beginning of 1651 until the Restoration . |
9 | Capt. Garner was invalidated out of the Army and resumed his £200 per annum post as Club Secretary ( plus 10s. 0d. a month expenses ) . |
10 | The lorry had not long come out of the tunnel when Tony suddenly clicked his tongue and applied the footbrake . |
11 | ‘ They say the Hidden Folk have come out of the mountains and attacked the Rorims to the south in league with the beasts , ’ the landlord whispered confidentially . |
12 | If it can , good will come out of the traumas that our colleague has suffered and that will be for the good of potential victims . |
13 | Far from it : he had come out of the darkness and was full of hope and plans . |
14 | When you have finished your conversation , thank it for its help , and see a shaft of light come out of the sky and illuminate this aspect of your Shadow . |
15 | Soon I had come out of the field and was walking along the path opposite where my home would be . |
16 | They are complaining about loss of assets ’ — looked as though they had n't come out of the Bermans and Nathans mothballs . |
17 | says explaining why he had come to earth Jesus told the Roman governor Pontius Pilate , will thus I 've been born and for this purpose I have come out of the world that I should bear witness to the truth , but what particular truth was Jesus sent to earth to make no man , first just about his heavenly father , he taught his followers to pray that his father name be hallowed or hell holy and he prayed , I have made your name manifest to the man you gave me , also he said I must declare the good news with the kingdom of God , because for this I was sent forth , so what truths did Jesus come to er , to tell ? |
18 | Belinda flinched as she saw who it was that had come out of the lift and addressed her . |
19 | As a result of good product design , developments in colour printing , trading up , increased marketing by museums and galleries and perhaps above all the ‘ image ’ culture promulgated by television and the media more generally , calendars have come out of the office and potting shed and into prime sites in the home — and they need to be replaced every year . |
20 | Then we see the health care professional come out of the room and say something like , ‘ I 'm sorry , we did all we could . ’ |
21 | There 's a group that 's come out of the closet and swaps clothes , |
22 | Most faces have turned to watch the ā gri who 's just come out of the shrine and is standing in the doorway . |
23 | By that time , their wives had come out of the crowd and got hold of them , and were taking them away . |
24 | He was lifted out of the water and dumped with a smack on hard wood . |
25 | I shall here consider three such attempts to connect past and present : firstly , that which I shall call a ‘ kairos ’ approach , in which the past is basically normative but it is said that there can be development ; secondly , that which I shall call the ‘ golden thread ’ approach , in which a leading motif is lifted out of the past and applied in another situation ; thirdly , that which I shall call an ‘ a priori ethical ’ position , in which essentially authority is seen to lie in the present but there is not perceived to be any fundamental clash with the past . |
26 | The brains themselves only need the lightest poaching for a quarter of an hour before being lifted out of the court-bouillon and set on the beds of lettuce . |
27 | The policeman , who had materialised out of the hedgerow when she approached the churchyard , had had her name written in his notebook . |
28 | A member of staff said that the patients could not be evacuated out of the town as it Continued on Page 5 Continued from Page 1 was cut-off . |
29 | As it was American atomic attitudes in this period hardened British resolution not to be bullied out of the business and not to acquiesce in an American monopoly ; it encouraged her determination to be a nuclear power for the sake of the influence this was expected to give her in Washington ! |
30 | I could not have looked out of the window if I had tried , the chores were all done , and there was nothing whatever to do except sit at that table and write . |