Example sentences of "[coord] [noun pl] [verb] [adv prt] of " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The ‘ purlieus ’ , or areas put out of the forest by the perambulations , were a special bone of contention .
2 1.69 The automatic directions provided for by RSC Ord 25 , r8 come into effect at close of pleadings which is 14 days after service of defence , reply , or defence to counterclaim , and are as follows ( material differences in the corresponding CCR Ord 17 , r11 are noted ) : ( 1 ) Discovery within 14 days ( 28 days in a county court ) and inspection of documents within seven days after ( see para 1.48 above in relation to actions in which liability is admitted or actions arising out of a road traffic accident ) .
3 In RW Green Ltd v Cade Bros Farm [ 1978 ] 1 Lloyd 's Rep 602 a term in a contract for the sale of seed potatoes provided that the supplier 's liability for " compensation and damages payable under any claim or claims arising out of this contract under whatsoever pretext " was to be limited to a sum not exceeding the contract price .
4 The interesting feature is the variety of sub-topics and activities arising out of this one unit , offering to pupils a considerable element of choice as well as of imaginative " playing-out " .
5 A pheasant squawked and birds burst out of the trees .
6 People 's values and attitudes arise out of their material environment and daily experiences as much as out of what they hear or read .
7 With XPG4 , as part of its sworn intent to become more user-oriented , X/Open will be assembling various specific user packages and profiles made up of combinations of the existing and new XPG components .
8 This is a novel of talk and opinions got out of books , and at one stage Dostoevsky proposed ‘ NB .
9 But coaching and plans went out of the window .
10 Any junkie or Bowery red-eye comes limping down the street , then five sombre fatboys with baseball bats and axe-handles stride out of the nearest trattoria .
11 A new head will , more than likely , face unfavourable comparisons with his predecessor in whose time there were never naughty children or wet playtimes , all teachers were perfect and parents , government and headteachers stayed out of class room business leaving teaching to teachers .
12 As long as Germany 's long-term interest rates sank and currencies dropped out of Europe 's exchange-rate mechanism ( ERM ) like ripe fruit , the deficit could be ignored .
13 The time of Sigmar sees the Orcs and Goblins driven out of the lands west of the Worlds Edge Mountains .
14 Chatmeister Terry Wogan exemplifies the Seventies penchant for shirts and ties made out of the same floral tablecloth .
15 I am sure the warm affinities between Scots and Jews arise out of appreciation of herrings .
16 They flowed from every avenue of the kitchen , a waist-high tide of grubby , grey-cowled figures rushing in towards him , their coloured boots , sashes and hat-brims swirling out of the mist .
17 Appropriately , this castle was the setting for his last exhibition , early this year , of the fabulous ‘ Winter images ’ that he had recently devoted his energies to — tableaus of men and animals created out of ice and snow .
18 The Christmas tree decorated only with silver stars cut out and bows made out of paper rope , you cut the paper rope and just tie up the bows .
19 Over a period of time circuit boards and chips creep out of their sockets as different components cool and heat up at different rates .
20 He dressed the same as all other Vietnamese : a drab tunic suit and sandals made out of old lorry tyres .
21 Having regard to the objectives and the general scheme of the Convention , that it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention for the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned .
22 Having regard to the objective and the general scheme of the Convention , it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention for the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned .
23 As the court held with respect to the expression ‘ matters relating to a contract ’ used in article 5(1) ( see the judgments of 22 March 1983 in Peters [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 , and of 8 March 1988 in Arcado [ 1988 ] E.C.R. 1539 ) , having regard to the objectives and general scheme of the Convention , it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention of the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned .
24 French actress Juliette Binoche plays Michele , an artist from a wealthy family who is going blind and lives rough out of choice .
25 One may think of an army brigade as being composed of battalions , battalions made up of companies and companies made up of platoons .
26 And would the paper , edited by the man who had the crotches and armpits cut out of his suits by Pamela Bordes , be featuring Mr Bell at all ?
27 The musical content of The Mysteries was provided by a group of musicians and singers made up of pupils and staff and even the school chaplain , Father Nick Kern on bass guitar .
28 An inverted , climbing helicopter tends to cause the brain and thumbs to go out of synch !
29 We all made our own way up the stone steps to the guardian 's hut , a recommended viewing point for the classic view over Machu Picchu 's maze of empty plazas , chambers , alleyways , and staircases carved out of solid rock .
30 After nearly eight years of working as an editor of the NI , I have facts embedded in my brain and figures coming out of my ears .
  Next page