Example sentences of "more [adj] [verb] out of " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Rather than travel out from Highgate , it seemed more sensible to move out of London and travel in to town .
2 ‘ We must have a five-point plan for autumn safety : 1 ) Get all poisonous plants clearly labelled ; 2 ) Put government health warnings on toadstools ; 3 ) Secure all dangerous-looking branches ; 4 ) Spread polythene sheets beneath all major leaf-producing trees ; 5 ) Have a national warning system for cold days on which apples , conkers and so on , are much more likely to fall out of the trees and cause these horrendous injuries . ’
3 Species with good jumping ability are more able to get out of pits than are species that can not jump ( Rackham , 1982 ) .
4 By arriving early in the evening I can fish both periods , and it would be time-consuming and much more tiring to get out of bed in the middle of the night to arrive at the water before first light and to stay until 1.30 the following morning .
5 The latter have always found it more difficult to move out of cities than owner occupiers , because of the limited availability of private-rented accommodation outside the large cities and because of the barriers limiting transfers between council housing areas .
6 The theory of an original simplicity about the good Galilean carpenter Jesus , which was surrounded with supernatural stories and so corrupted and made complicated , began to look far more doubtful ; at least , more difficult to get out of any evidence available .
7 If you are planning to give a particularly large sum , it is always more advantageous to give out of income by covenant than to give a capital sum .
  Next page