Example sentences of "be kept [adv prt] of the " in BNC.

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1 Speed boats and fishing nets also need to be kept out of the area .
2 They had to be kept out of the water until they had lost their baby down and grown waterproof adult oily feathers .
3 Women as tempting as you should be kept out of the sight of mortal men . ’
4 But he is likely to be kept out of the team by Prost who is believed to have a deal which bars the Brazilian from coming in as his partner .
5 Certainly the United States should be kept out of the Asian continent and it would be beneficial for the Korean peninsula to be ruled by a communist government .
6 I had done very little imaginative work and would not have regarded this as my greatest negotiating success , but it was certainly so regarded by Harold Wilson who assured me that my name would be kept out of the proceedings , since I had then , and retain , a keen dislike for gratuitous publicity .
7 Small babies — under the age of six months — should be kept out of the sun altogether .
8 Babies under six months have very little natural protection and should be kept out of the sun altogether .
9 ‘ Yes , Philippe thought I should be kept out of the way for a few days … ’
10 Experts say that babies under six months should be kept out of the sun altogether and children should wear total block sunscreens , even when just playing out in the summer at home .
11 Finally someone spoke to a policeman about her , saying he thought it was disgraceful that such a person should be allowed to lurk about near to a play-park for the under-fives , and that ‘ nutty beggar-women ’ should be kept out of the parks .
12 He wants the sheep to be kept out of the industrial estate .
13 Many drivers sympathise with the suggestion cars should be kept out of the city centre .
14 Erm it maybe that in this alteration the erm it 's worth just spending a minute on whether B eight should just be kept out of the frame for the moment and it 's something that gets dealt with at a later time when more policies are in play .
15 It means that someone is being kept out of the know , and it 's often been me in the past , and it 's me now .
16 Sealey has been kept out of the first team picture at Villa by Nigel Spink .
17 Your article of April 10th about the CS First Boston Group states that it has been kept out of the league of top-flight American investment banks .
18 The Soviet Union had been kept out of the administration of Japan other than the futile complaints of the Soviet representative in the ACJ .
19 Then the risks that Hayzen associates with the ‘ Scramble ’ position may not exist , because rivals have been kept out of the market and it is too late to enter .
20 Sabine Jourdain had been killed because of what she was prepared to say , Barbara Coleman had been kept out of the way because of what she knew and Rain was to be killed before she could publish the story .
21 The previous year regular Arts Centre visitors complained they had been kept out of the centre because of the massive popularity of the festival .
22 Small items of cash are kept out of the cash book , thus saving time and space .
23 She says Dickens knows how to write about men but women are kept out of the limelight .
24 The advantage of a special utility room ( perhaps and old scullery or larder ) is that the noise , steam and clutter associated with doing the laundry is kept out of the kitchen , but the disadvantage is the extra space it takes up .
25 A weekly list of horses to follow HUFOOF : Had her stands-side rivals beaten in a 24-runner sprint at Haydock on Saturday but was kept out of the frame by the finishers on the far side of the track .
26 Support will come from another useful acquisition in Joey Benjamin , 31 , who was kept out of the Warwickshire side last year after impressing in 1990 with 34 wickets at 30 .
27 Fleck was kept out of the first meeting between the two sides at Carrow Road — when Chelsea went down 2-1 .
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