Example sentences of "go out of [pos pn] way " in BNC.

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1 All Banks are now going out of their way to be as professional as possible and as customer friendly as that professionalism will allow .
2 N H S Trusts has been going out of their way to recruit managers with experience in private profit sector .
3 ‘ I know that people are not going out of their way to create problems but I believe the national side has a great role to play in terms of providing players with status , confidence and a substantially increased market value .
4 As said , all the District Councillors are opposed to it , I 'm opposed to it , and there 's very clear cut Highways Authority reasons for refusing , but in spite of that District Council seems to be going out of its way to bend over backwards and , and help the , the applicants for some reason or another , presumably to get this thing through .
5 He added : ‘ Bryan seemed to be going out of his way to play a father 's role with the children .
6 Fortunately , Collins was remembered with much affection , which , according to the old shipwright , was the only reason why the Keraing was going out of his way to help us .
7 but I do , if a man , a bloke 's going out of his way
8 Is it worth going out of your way for instant cash on a share deal ?
9 Your going out of your way to see him again . ’
10 you 're going out of your way .
11 We should be talking with them and going out of our way to assure them that we do not wish to engage in a price war .
12 Indeed , at times she even seemed to go out of her way to draw attention to herself .
13 Anger began to grow , fuelled by the possibility that because certain extremists seemed to go out of their way to look for signs of Satan in every aspect of everyday life , people living quiet , caring family lives had been put into a state of terror and agony .
14 He trains his people to identify customer needs clearly and to go out of their way to meet those needs .
15 BNFL News editor said : ‘ The dispensers will be placed so that no one will have to go out of their way to pick up a copy and they will be topped up regularly .
16 BNFL News editor said : ‘ The dispensers will be placed so that no one will have to go out of their way to pick up a copy and they will be topped up regularly .
17 We are far less controversial than most of them … and lets face it , anyone who receives mail from the list has to go out of their way to get that mail … unlike fanzines .
18 Those people will always find bad in what you do , but I 'm certainly not going to go out of my way to avoid being a subject for them to beat down on . ’
19 This Bel-Shamharoth seemed prepared to go out of his way to help stranded travellers .
20 Then he remembered , he had to go out of his way to go to her flat .
21 YOUNG Colin Fraser usually has to go out of his way to see his favourite children 's programme .
22 We have a Mother and Baby Room and try to go out of our way to make life easy . ’
23 If a horse has to be shot , or , I suppose , a rider — perhaps they do that sort of thing in polo ; I expect they do since the Army has a hand in it — you do n't have to go out of your way to ensure that she has a ringside seat .
24 However , sometimes the situation is quite different and the horse goes out of its way to make itself tense and anxious .
25 Perhaps Bruce Kent 's critics should take a leaf out of the book of the nuclear lobby , which goes out of its way to substantiate the case for nuclear power for civil purposes .
26 I have the greatest difficulty in finding the remotest sense in the policy of a party which says that it is in favour of investment but which goes out of its way by every possible means to penalise saving .
27 And the irony is compounded by the fact that Derrida goes out of his way to resist any kind of adequate treatment in a book like this .
28 For one thing , Callinicos goes out of his way to establish that the intellectual tradition he is concerned to critique is itself most fruitfully read , not as an articulation of a qualitatively new postmodernism , but an instance of a Modernist-type response .
29 These days the king goes out of his way to remind listeners that he is the senior representative of the Hashemites , ‘ the noblest family in Islam ’ and the traditional guardians of Mecca and Medina until they were thrown out by the al-Saud family in 1925 .
30 In two of the best-known cases — his description of John Biffen as a ‘ semi-detached ’ member of the cabinet and of Francis ( now Lord ) Pym as the depressive wartime radio character Mona Lott — he goes out of his way to explain what went wrong .
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