Example sentences of "[vb infin] and [verb] out [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Or she could kneel and look out of the window , or do some physical jerks .
2 Let's eat and get out of here .
3 The sources from which the children could find information enabling them to make fullest use of the church study were not confined to what they saw in the booklet nor what they could see and think out for themselves ; a number of people , both inside and outside the school , were enthusiastic and available for consultation .
4 But it gets easier , and if we do n't begin and step out in faith then our gift will never mature .
5 ‘ Do n't try and wriggle out of your inattention to duty .
6 ‘ Now , do n't try and wriggle out of it or I 'll send Vittorio round to see you .
7 I 'll try and stay out of your way while she 's here . ’
8 and er so Mrs said oh we must , we must try and get out of Khartoum cos it was so hot and we 'd booked to go to k er for a week
9 And , it used to take Joey such a long time that erm but still , I I must try and get out of that , but the trouble is it 's in me now .
10 I would n't be a bit surprised , I 'll try and find out for you
11 I 'll try and find out for you
12 If you will be moving up to Guides soon , why not try and find out about the Company you will be joining ?
13 Dated-product manufacturers will try and sell out by year-end , so repeat orders before Christmas can be a problem .
14 A PRISONER who did a clothes switch and walked out with visitors to Acklington prison , Northumberland , was on the run yesterday .
15 You can go and pee out of the window .
16 It is with regret that we join the chorus of voices calling for the resignation of Jocelyn Stevens as chairman of Britain 's architectural and archaeological conservation body , English Heritage : any man so free of mealy-mouthed PR awareness as to tell a bothersome journalist to ‘ go and pee out of the window ’ is a true blue .
17 Let's go and look out for our glad rags . ’
18 Suddenly I felt my arm go and fall out of its joint . ’
19 See at I can just let her go and play out on the park , or at anything , you know with the other kids , but round here you ca n't .
20 An' if it gets too bad , your little girls can come and drink out of the swimming-pool .
21 Maybe she could come and help out in my tea shop . ’
22 Her conscious understanding of how she was using language is clear from the explanations she gives for the expressions she uses in the poem : ( on line 2 ) " She lived outside in the open , so the air was like her house " ; ( on line 5 " the streets were like a giant shop where she could pick and choose out of bins and gutters " ; ( on line 8 ) " this means she was close to nature and she felt like the yew was her mother " .
23 The specialists are then much easier to satisfy — providing they are given the right kind of food , they are content to sit and stare out from their cages , much as they would sit and stare out at their wild landscapes .
24 The chest of this fish is adapted to give sufficient power to the large pectoral fins so that the fish can leap and glide out of and across the surface of the water when it is necessary to escape from danger .
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