Sentence examples for spectator out from inspiring English sources

The phrase "spectator out" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to indicate that a spectator has left or is no longer present, but it lacks clarity and context. Example: "After the final whistle, the spectator out of the stadium was a common sight."

Exact(2)

But a Cleveland Police Department report blamed what it called a riot on the fans who were facing charges, saying a security official was punched and knocked to the ground while trying to escort an unruly spectator out.

His term "constructed situations" comes from the French theorist Guy Debord's 1957 manifesto "Report on the Construction of Situations," which called for the artist to generate moments that would jolt the spectator out of passivity, rendering him the co-creator of a less mediocre life.

Similar(56)

The original Lord's, after all, was built to keep spectators out, not in.

This enlarged the area engulfed with violence, but they were isolated incidents involving just a few dozen of the several thousand people there who basically peaceful protestors or spectators out for a Sunday afternoon.

On the day, the gates to St James Parkk needed to be closed before the match started to keep additional spectators out, some 64,484 fans already being inside the ground.

Halfway down the first fairway, a spectator called out, "Welcome back, Tiger".

A sympathetic crowd rallied round the former champion – "Come on, Venus, we love you!" one spectator cried out – but Vesnina secured victory after just 75 minutes.

"COME on, Serena," the feisty spectator cried out from somewhere behind Venus Williams after one game was completed in the third set.

As Matthew d'Ancona, erstwhile editor of The Spectator points out:"We have been reminded relentlessly and remorselessly that not all who question immigration are racist (it's in Enoch Powell's 'Rivers of Blood' speech if you care to look).

(Mr. Crabb recalls a performance in which a frustrated spectator shouted out, "This story is sad!") But there's also a measure of comedy-club good will that performers earn when they decide to tell a story.

However, as a review in the Spectator points out, Suttee (or sati) was banned in the Raj by early 1829 and there is some scholarship that suggests the imperial presence actually exacerbated the practise, rather than curtailing it.

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