Example sentences of "out of the [noun sg] of [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A rentcharge is the right to receive an annual sum out of the income of land , usually in perpetuity , and to distrain if the payments are in arrear ; the owner of the land is also personally liable to pay , and further remedies against the land have been given by statute .
2 At every stage new groups of showmen sprang up out of the maelstrom of society .
3 This was indeed an English performance straight out of the text-book of over-ambition being thwarted by grim reality .
4 The membership of the League of Nations from 1919 to 1939 never exceeded 54 countries , whereas some 160 nation states , covering almost the entire globe , are members of the present United Nations , and the numbers are still increasing as new nations arise out of the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union .
5 Both had the broadly similar functions of recording , in different ways , payments into and out of the Exchequer of Receipt ; but from the middle of the sixteenth century the older office , the Clerkship of the Pells , was being encroached upon by the Writer of the Tallies .
6 Cornelia Knight has been lifted out of the category of femininity in which woman is famed for her ‘ beauty ’ , itself an effect of class ( food , clothes , health ) and an attempt is being made , using the most canonised resources of western art to imag(in)e for us a combination of femininity and intellectuality .
7 The primary reason for this was the large increase er in the population of Germany arising out of the reunification of country .
8 Vincent Chung , Jeffrey Kitingan , Ariffin Haji Hamid , Benedict Topin , Albinus Yudah , Abdul Rahman Ahmad and Wencelous Damit Undikai were arrested in 1990 and 1991 for alleged involvement in a plot ‘ to take Sabah out of the Federation of Malaysia ’ .
9 Out of the conceptualization of housework as work which is a major theme of this study arises the need to spell out the different components in what is broadly termed women 's ‘ domesticity ’ .
10 ‘ Once you get out of the sight of land , one bit of sea is very much like another , ’ he said yesterday .
11 Anywhere in Vienna 's out of the question of course , or we 'll finish up getting shot alongside him . ’
12 If anything was growing at an alarming rate , it was the network of railway lines running out of the centre of London to outlying suburbs .
13 Situated eight kilometres out of the centre of Funchal on the Camacha road , they can be reached by bus or taxi .
14 One anxious mother , Jane Brooks , said : ‘ As people drive through and then out of the centre of Holybourne they seem to forget that speed restrictions still apply .
15 The official also said that Britain had failed to account for its decision to move the colony 's main naval base out of the centre of Hong Kong , a move which he believed would have serious repercussions for the stationing of the Chinese military in the territory after the 1997 transfer of power .
16 Came the day , and the film unit — a ponderous line of vehicles , carrying half a ton of exceedingly expensive equipment and all the people required to make it work efficiently — rumbled out of the centre of Leeds .
17 Everyone on the trams and buses was carrying bales and bundles , so that the freak morning rush-hour looked like an immense double-decker funeral cortege , winding its way out of the centre of Glasgow in every direction .
18 On these mornings her freckled face was blanched , and she sat motionless at the breakfast table , staring sightlessly into a cup of cold , wrinkle-skinned coffee , while her long red hair gradually slithered out of the nest of twists she had knotted it into , and hairgrips pinged out over the floor and the table around her .
19 WWF argues that discussion of the MTO , designed to replace the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade ( GATT ) , has been " unacceptably secretive " and should be taken out of the framework of GATT 's Uruguay Round and opened up to public consultation .
20 The Court was much less explicit on the matter , but nevertheless did hold that the transaction was not incapable of falling within the scope of the Directive on the ground that it ‘ arises out of the grant of subsidies to foundations or associations whose services are not remunerated . ’
21 Indeed the European Court of Justice has recently held in Dr Sophie Redmond Stichting v Bartol [ 1992 ] IRLR 366 that the " fact that … the transaction arises out of the grant of subsidies to foundations or associations whose services are not remunerated does not exclude the transaction from the scope of the EC Acquired Rights Directive " .
22 In particular , indirect attempts to uncover the phenomenon have been made by Crenson and others , but these have tended to founder on the difficulties of separating the notion of a ‘ latent issue ’ , for which one relies on observation of declared but otherwise undeveloped wishes of significant actors , from that of ‘ real interests ’ , which introduces altogether different problems of method , and of course takes one completely out of the field of behaviourism .
23 When considering whether a statutory redundancy payment was pay within article 119 , it was essential to appreciate that today there existed contractual redundancy payments — arising out of the contract of employment — and , by contrast , statutory redundancy payments arising out of the statutory scheme in the 1978 Act .
24 Then Float Up CP emerged out of the debris of Rip Rig , but the moment had passed .
25 But there is unity in diversity and just as the OlHebrews developed their monotheistic religion out of the mish-mash of cults in Palestine , so the unity of the Book of Genesis developed out of sacred writings .
26 ‘ I love Harvey , ’ and little noises came out of the sphere of hair as if a canary was eating a hearty meal of seeds .
27 Poor cutlery will have tiny burrs inside the fork prongs where it has been stamped out of the sheet of metal .
28 Mr Carter , 21 , of Darlington , has passed out of the School of Recruit Training at RAF Swinderby near Lincoln as Best Recruit of his Intake .
29 Unlike Plato , from whom he never escaped , Crossman was not satisfied to ‘ stand behind a wall out of the storm of wind and dust ’ .
30 She felt that the slightest movement would snap his will , precipitating an explosion out of the swell of desire that was sweeping them both to the edge of a world they were too prudent to enter willingly .
  Next page