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

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1 In the best of worlds the provisions of the partnership agreement will cover all eventualities arising out of the departure of a member of the firm .
2 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 .
3 The trustees ' expenses and proper management fees , therefore , are paid out of the income of the trust taxed at the basic rate , and no relief can be claimed by the trustees or beneficiaries in respect thereof .
4 They had not reaped the fortune he hoped for — they had not become ‘ the new Rolling Stones ’ ; but the signing had the required affect of shaking Virgin out of the torpor of the mid-Seventies .
5 surging out of the heart of the garden :
6 He would n't even have to stir out of the cool of his office .
7 At every stage new groups of showmen sprang up out of the maelstrom of society .
8 Thus was a popular nationalism created , not by intention or design , but out of the exigencies of the struggle .
9 Henry pulled the plastic bags out of the boot of the Passat , and lowered his eyes .
10 Then , medal safely tucked away , it was time for an impromptu picnic out of the boot of the limosine , and do a little celebrity spotting .
11 They were on exactly the same wavelength as Massim d'Azeglio who said , after Italy had been politically unified : ‘ We have made Italy , now we have to make Italians ’ , that is out of the inhabitants of the peninsula who had all sorts of identities , but not one based on a language they did not speak , and a state that had come into existence over their heads .
12 The Cadillac Automobile Company was formed in 902 out of the remnants of one of Henry Ford 's early attempts at building cars , and the company 's backers turned to Leland for help .
13 When the police regrouped with the intention of holding a railway bridge , pickets constructed blazing barricades out of the remnants of scrapped cars , telegraph poles and a portakabin to prevent a second advance .
14 Mrs Langley said faintly , ‘ Hens — ’ and Rose , startled out of the remnants of her confusion said , ‘ Why ca n't — ; ca n't the gardener do that ? ’
15 A believer in market forces , she differs from Thatcher in her interventionism , and it is a safe bet that what the French euphemistically call ‘ positive actions ’ will be brought to bear to shake the best out of the likes of Thomson .
16 This was indeed an English performance straight out of the text-book of over-ambition being thwarted by grim reality .
17 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 .
18 Amongst the dust and waste , characters who might have stepped straight out of the pages of Dickens or Mrs Gaskell bloomed .
19 At last , a jazz influenced band who do n't try to look as if they 've just stepped out of the pages of Kerouac .
20 On Kenya 's border with Tanzania are the internationally known Serengeti and Maasai Mara reserves , where the annual migration of millions of wildebeeste and zebras to warmer northern parts forms a wondrous spectacle straight out of the pages of ‘ Out of Africa ’ .
21 Take Castell Coch , a Victorian fantasy straight out of the pages of ‘ Sleeping Beauty ’ , situated just north of Cardiff .
22 Around the inner walls the Annamese soldiers of the imperial guard , who looked as if they 'd stepped out of the pages of one of his adventure-story books , stood sentinel with their muskets .
23 Her family history is equally dramatic and could almost have come straight out of the pages of a Barbara Cartland novel .
24 Every announcement , public statement or document as aforesaid made or published by it or on its behalf in the course of KPMG 's engagement hereunder will contain all particulars required to comply with all applicable statutory , legal and regulatory provisions ( other than particulars required by the rules and regulations of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales arising out of the involvement of any Indemnified Person in the Offer ) and all requirements of The Stock Exchange and of the City Code , all other information which might reasonably be considered material in the context thereof and all facts , expressions of opinion , expectations or intentions or other information reasonably required by KPMG ;
25 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 .
26 She had a glimpse of a lined face under straggling white locks , rising out of the bulges of an over-large nightgown , before the dog , Hector , catching sight of the stranger , set up another protest , rising as he did so .
27 Preparation will also enable you to get the best possible ‘ value ’ out of the expertise of the professional you are consulting who will have access to all the relevant facts and will be quite clear about what you are hoping to find out .
28 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 .
29 Then the thought eddied away again out of the grasp of his mind ; he looked down at the subservient curve of the boy 's back , found his rhythm again , pumped , and came .
30 She struggled proudly out of the grasp of the hard hands that held her upper arms .
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