How To Use Deal out In A Sentence

  • Proceed to deal out a second row of ten cards underneath the first, playing suitable ones as before, playing _also from the upper row_, and refilling spaces subject to Rule III. Lady Cadogan's Illustrated Games of Solitaire or Patience New Revised Edition, including American Games
  • I don't make a big deal out of them calling me by my first name, but it's just kind of exasperating since if I was an older looking man like the other professor I highly doubt they would call me by my first name or assume I was a TA. Emails to undergrads
  • Where my neighbours run a grow-op and deal out of their house. Boarding the House | Her Bad Mother
  • (Asked on NBC after the race if that streak had "gnawed" at him, Pletcher answered, "not as much as everybody else who made a big deal out of it" — but by then we'd been hooked on his saga.) Kentucky Derby show has winners across board
  • I had various upgrades added and managed to screw a good deal out of them.
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  • Adolescents have had a raw deal out of a government which heaps expectations on them which they can't meet.
  • It is the duty of a judge to deal out justice.
  • The companies that claim this will kill innovation are making a big deal out of nothing.
  • The idea of maximin relative concession is that each bargainer will be most concerned with the concessions that she makes from her ideal outcome relative to the concessions that others make.
  • In a cursory survey of life it is obvious that a vast number of species spanning most kingdoms and phyla have features that are teleologically designed to deal out disease and/or death.
  • You continue thus to deal out the entire pack in successive rows, each row completely blocking the preceding one unless the removal of a card releases the one above it, or _unless the removal of cards in the upper rows_ (Rule II) releases that card from above. Lady Cadogan's Illustrated Games of Solitaire or Patience New Revised Edition, including American Games
  • ‘I don't want to make a big deal out of this,’ she says with a characteristic mixture of grace and frankness.
  • Our main challenge is to even the playing field, and make sure that the victims of griefers can easily deal out some payback.
  • She'd dressed for breakfast in shorts and T-shirt and it wasn't the ideal outfit for talking business with hotel managers.
  • They are large ovoidal masses of moss, lichen, and moss-roots, often tacked together a good deal outside with cotton-wool, down of different descriptions, and cobwebs. The Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds, Volume 1
  • For instance, about AD 400, the great St. Chrysostom very emphatically insists that the Spirit is given through the water rite, even though he also makes a great deal out of the importance of the later chrismation that follows. Stand Firm
  • He too pronounces ex cathedra upon the characters of his contemporaries; and though he scruples not to deal out praise, even lavishly, to the lowest reptile in Grubstreet who will either flatter him in private, or mount the public rostrum as his panegyrist, he damns all the other writers of the age, with the utmost insolence and rancour — The Expedition of Humphry Clinker
  • Deal out one card at a time to each player until the whole pack has been dealt.
  • Communism: You have bicephalous milk cow, the country takes away both ends, deal out your milk.
  • Once again ... shes trying to make a bigger deal out of something. Palin hits back at 'malicious' photo
  • It is the duty of a judge to deal out justice.
  • She'd dressed for breakfast in shorts and T-shirt and it wasn't the ideal outfit for talking business with hotel managers.
  • Then he began to deal out his drolleries, such as would make the dismallest jemmy guffaw, and gave vent to all manner of buffooneries; but the Caliph laughed not neither smiled, whereat The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Speaking of sensors, Motorola is making a big deal out of its new camera that can be activated through two quick flips of the wrist.
  • The term implies something less than the ideal outcome of a war: reservation, equivocation, ambiguity, limitation—substitutes for victory. Between War and Peace
  • Before then, she may deny both sides the no-deal outcome they crave with more fudge and mudge. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their cowardly producers make a big deal out of courting our support and money, but they never deliver the goods.
  • It is the duty of a judge to deal out justice.
  • Everyone puts a nickel into the pot and you deal out 5 cards to each player.
  • You then take up the next packet, and deal it out in the same manner, beginning on your right (if you are dealing No. 3, deal the first card on No. 4), and continue to deal out each packet till all are exhausted, _pausing between each deal to examine the packets and to make further combinations, and placing on the numerals any suitable cards that may have been produced by the fresh deal_, but the re-deal of each ground packet must be complete before placing cards on the numerals. Lady Cadogan's Illustrated Games of Solitaire or Patience New Revised Edition, including American Games
  • Then you could be in a strong position to haggle a better deal out of your chosen provider. Times, Sunday Times
  • The traders, shops, money changers and such were allowed to deal outside of the gates of the bourg or castle compound, in an area called a Faubourg.
  • We have only a small amount of food and clothing to deal out to each refugee.
  • Evelyn was a good deal out of sorts, said Hugh, intimating by a kind of pout or swell of his very well-covered, manly, extremely handsome, perfectly upholstered body Mrs. Dalloway
  • Does Mr Boas, perchance, partake this implied opinion, that authorship unsexes; and is it therefore that he allows himself to deal out such hard measure to the Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845
  • Yield the title of the website, for example the thread that IT myna makes whole story, become a story to move toward the core element of ideal outcome, make graven one part.
  • In addition to its use for greenhouse lighting and frost protection, it is an ideal outdoor lantern for barbecues, camping and caravanning.
  • In addition to its use for greenhouse lighting and frost protection, it is an ideal outdoor lantern for barbecues, camping and caravanning.
  • We have only a small amount of food and clothing to deal out to each refugee.
  • I know a lot of people made a big deal out of Jones in the national media, but believe me, he dogged it a lot and didn't seem real eager when he had the chance to run routes and line up at tight end.
  • It's capped off with an ultra-suave outro that shows Radio 4 knows how to deal out the style with the substance in equal dollops.
  • In addition to its use for greenhouse lighting and frost protection, it is an ideal outdoor lantern for barbecues, camping and caravanning.
  • Then you could be in a strong position to haggle a better deal out of your chosen provider. Times, Sunday Times
  • He argued that "there's a better deal out there to be had," and cited "the paltry Internet move over residual" and the "larcenous" force majeure settlement as reasons. Jonathan Handel: SAG-AFTRA Ratify Advertising Agreement; SAG Townhall Features Fireworks
  • I know I'm probably making a big deal out of nothing, but I'm worried about you.
  • It is squarely in the tradition of Japanese ghost stories, where revenants deal out cruel and inexplicable vengeance for obscure reasons.

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