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

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1 In their private lives , many of the repealers sought to live out the ideal of companionate marriage .
2 Several banks operate special accounts designed to smooth out the impact of these unavoidable and important bills , many of which arise quarterly .
3 The discovery was painful , and his heavy-lidded eyes narrowed to shut out the picture she made with them .
4 There is an increasing number of local authorities , universities and schools wishing to try out the artist-in-residence idea .
5 Meanwhile the British warships had to ride out the monsoon .
6 The search for such solutions fails to draw out the full implications of the criticisms of the traditional method of legitimating corporate managerial power .
7 The defendants applied to strike out the statement of claim of the local authority on a preliminary issue on the grounds that the authority could not maintain an action in libel for words which reflected on it in relation to its governmental and administrative functions and that the statement of claim disclosed no cause of action .
8 But it was one of my self-imposed duties to try to even out the peaks and troughs of his capricious temperament and make sure he produced his best golf when it mattered .
9 Companies wanting to try out the cards can buy an application test kit for $1,800 .
10 Cutting the mids helped knock out the troublesome frequencies , but the sound did suffer , since it 's often the mid frequencies that you need to increase at higher volumes to prevent that harsh , trebly electro-acoustic sound .
11 The FMLN denied claims that its urban commandos had carried out the murder .
12 The Sunday newspaper articles had come out the week before last , and were still bringing in letters .
13 " These problems are now more or less under control , with the mature plants helping to blanket out the weeds , " explains Barbara .
14 Vineyardlaced fields are brilliant and vibrant in promise and delivery ; dusky grey-green olive groves dress the hillsides and pines and cypresses appear to point out the landscape .
15 After a brief warm-up , participants dispersed to try out the various sports , and then the time came for the games , which involved the competitors in ( among other things ) rushing to get balls round traffic cones , and into baskets .
16 The bombardment of chilly droplets seemed to drive out the blackness of her thoughts .
17 These courses are run over several months , giving participants time to try out the suggestions over a period of time .
18 Should booksellers decide to carry out the market research themselves , they should not forget , Ms Morris warned , that their own time was money and that there would also be postal and printing costs .
19 And as urgent talks went on in London and Barcelona , the words returned to haunt the top officials trying to sort out the shambles .
20 The Labour party plans a vast and sprawling bureaucracy which will need not just county hall , but Battersea power station , to house the thousands of officials required to carry out the wishes of Labour 's public sector trade union paymasters .
21 But what of the farmers expected to carry out the work in a time of recession .
22 Behind the scenes talks about a coalition programme were initiated and the party " managers met to share out the candidatures for the projected election .
23 Organisers expect to sell out the 52 matches , culminating with the championship at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena , California .
24 However , the amytal studies appear to rule out the force of this logical objection since in cases of bilateral speech some difficulty has been noted with injection on either side .
25 All these questions came tumbling out the moment she entered my room a couple of days later .
26 The first two define the person and then his behaviour but the third defines action , first , and then the qualities needed to carry out the function of truce-making .
27 Whilst the self-appraisal might be viewed as the school 's attempt to defend its policies and practices , rather than to appraise itself , and to make a special case for extra resources and improved staffing , the inspection could be seen as a process of ensuring that the school was performing to an acceptable standard and that no serious problems existed in terms of teacher performance and in terms of resources needed to carry out the curriculum .
28 As defence-industry consultants try to work out the consequences , some predictions are unchanged .
29 Readers of The National Trust Magazine will know from the annual summary of the Trust 's financial position how much more difficult it is becoming to find the resources required to carry out the Trust 's broad conservation responsibilities .
30 A number of studies have brought out the bargaining strength of trade unions during the period of near full employment [ Brown , 1981 ] , which enabled them to reinforce long-established work practices which were an incubus on British industry in the form of overmanning .
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