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How To Use Fork out In A Sentence

  • As Christians celebrate this momentous day, dipping into one's pocket to fork out that last ngwee and give to the needy is just as important.
  • Because of Stagecoach's speculation, the ratepayers of Southampton have had to fork out El 38,000 to provide another coach station.
  • I have got to fork out a lot of money to the collector of Taxes this year .
  • We don't want to have to fork out for an expensive meal.
  • This will save huge rifts when you fork out 4,500 on that reclining gamer chair. The Sun
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  • Fare dodgers who refuse to pay the initial fine usually have to fork out around £120.
  • Most plants have leaves with veins that fork outward from a central midrib.
  • He will have to fork out for private school fees for Nina.
  • Yes | No | Report from muskiemaster wrote 12 weeks 2 days ago fifteen foot fly rod and just drop it on top of him. no I'm just kidding I don't know what you could've done, maybe if I had a 9-foot 5-weight, Temple Fork Outfitters fly rod I could go catch him for you, sometimes luck just isn't on your side. Deeter: Help Me Catch That Scum-Sucking Pig! (And win a fly rod).
  • Gardeners might also fork out £2,000 for a statue-alarm - now commonplace in gardens owned by the National Trust.
  • Law-abiding drivers will have to fork out extra to pay for compensation awards to victims of some 1,000 hit-and-run incidents being dealt with by insurers.
  • I'm sure they'd happily do this rather than have to fork out the extra dosh. Times, Sunday Times
  • I got away from Slim on my own, and nobody had to fork out no fifty thousand.
  • What I do object to is having to fork out my tax money to subsidise such idiotic and unjust policies.
  • A sizzling workout last weekend encouraged connections to fork out the 15,000 supplementary fee. The Sun
  • Passengers travelling 230 miles to Amsterdam fork out £136.
  • We don't want to have to fork out for an expensive meal.
  • Will I actually fork out the spondulicks and righten the karmic balance?
  • A school is having to fork out to buy security cameras after yobs broke in and embarked on a spree of vandalism.
  • Drivers are expected to fork out £53 of their own money to take the test which has a pass rate of just 35 per cent.
  • I had to fork out £600 on my car when I had it serviced.
  • The battle of Pelennor fields may have been all the rage at the office, but Praful quietly cursed the decision to fork out 30 dirhams for a ticket to ‘The Return of the King’ and a free coke.
  • These thoughtless people should have to fork out, say £10, for missing their appointment without reasonable notification.
  • Now the taxpayer will have to fork out again to fund the gastric band operation. The Sun
  • Yes | No | Report from muskiemaster wrote 12 weeks 2 days ago fifteen foot fly rod and just drop it on top of him. no I'm just kidding I don't know what you could've done, maybe if I had a 9-foot 5-weight, Temple Fork Outfitters fly rod I could go catch him for you, sometimes luck just isn't on your side. Deeter: Help Me Catch That Scum-Sucking Pig! (And win a fly rod).
  • It certainly would need a big helping of irrational exuberance to persuade anyone to fork out for those vast, pricey buckets. Times, Sunday Times
  • Because of Stagecoach's speculation, the ratepayers of Southampton have had to fork out El 38,000 to provide another coach station.
  • Without care, paying for a speedy exit will become the norm and anyone not willing to fork out will suffer. The Sun
  • He carried his beer over to the stove and pushed her lightly away, after taking the fork out of her hand.
  • I couldn't persuade him to fork out for a new one.
  • Perhaps I was being a tightwad and didn't want to fork out the entrance admission.
  • Fork out young nettle plants under shrubs and hedge bottoms. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are going to have to fork out national insurance contributions at 13.8 per cent of any redundancy payments they make over 30,000. Times, Sunday Times
  • Also, to capture juicy yields from short-term buy-to-let, buyers must fork out for the most top-notch property in some of the city's most exclusive areas. Live and Let High
  • Fork out young nettle plants under shrubs and hedge bottoms. Times, Sunday Times
  • Unless you want to fork out £50 for a phone scrambler and subsequently draw attention to yourself, do not call directly from work.
  • Basically, the rich are more likely to go to university and therefore they are the ones who have to fork out.
  • He carried his beer over to the stove and pushed her lightly away, after taking the fork out of her hand.
  • His bandmate had to fork out 7million - plus a 6million house. The Sun
  • Because of Stagecoach's speculation, the ratepayers of Southampton have had to fork out El 38,000 to provide another coach station.
  • Now fork out the other three quarters of the cake and leave the remaining quarter undisturbed. Times, Sunday Times
  • This will save huge rifts when you fork out 4,500 on that reclining gamer chair. The Sun
  • No need to fork out for brands that make a song and dance about it. Times, Sunday Times
  • You'll have to fork out on publicity -- but there's no gallery to take a rake-off so you're quids in with the first sale. THE HARDIE INHERITANCE
  • Britons fork out more than a billion pounds a year on toys.
  • Fork out the dead plants and put in the new ones.
  • Can it sway the undecideds and thereby affect the election itself, or will only partisans fork out their money for a ticket?
  • No need to fork out for brands that make a song and dance about it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whether it be for 'narking' ... or as a taxpayer, who should fork out more to alleviate the poverty that apparently lies at the heart of this dysfunction? Not PC
  • Look for a second opinion before you fork out cash on the basis of a recommendation.
  • LG is one of several manufacturers to incorporate Freeview HD technology into its latest range of flatpanel TVs, bringing you a handful of high-definition channels without the need to fork out for an extra box. Pocket-lint
  • I wonder how much, in 40 or 50 years' time, someone will fork out for Matt Prior's Porsche, the one of which the current England stumper spoke to Sachin Tendulkar at Trent Bridge four summers ago? The lost boys rescued from wilderness years | Richard Williams
  • He will have to fork out for private school fees for Nina.
  • I had to fork out $30 for a cab home.
  • Fork out the dead plants and put in the new ones.
  • People who come from overseas for the match without a ticket are always prepared to fork out well above the going rate.
  • The transport chief said the cost of the damage was still unknown but, in any event, ECS would have to fork out £400 on its insurance excess.
  • Meanwhile farmers have no option but to fork out the ever-increasing premiums that insurers are demanding.
  • He carried his beer over to the stove and pushed her lightly away, after taking the fork out of her hand.
  • I had to fork out for a cab home.
  • No need to fork out for brands that make a song and dance about it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Before you fork out all your cash for a stonking place in the country, try renting a big house first to see if you actually like it
  • Ramping up the subsidies is a relatively cheap way for the French to go as it usually falls to the UK, as a net contributor to the EU, to have to fork out to keep French politicians in office. The French Protection
  • But for a development that must be costing squillions of renminbi, we're wondering why they didn't fork out an extra 100 kuai for a better translation of their PR spiel.
  • PIZZA lovers face having to fork out more dough for their favourite food as the price of cheese and processed tomatoes soars. The Sun
  • He will have to fork out for private school fees for Nina.
  • I had to fork out $30 for a cab home.
  • Fork out young nettle plants under shrubs and hedge bottoms. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why fork out for a taxi when there's a perfectly good bus service?
  • Britons fork out more than a billion pounds a year on toys.
  • Why fork out for a taxi when there's a perfectly good bus service?
  • Not only does it influence whether or not you fork out the requisite 65p, it can make or break a band.
  • Look for a second opinion before you fork out cash on the basis of a recommendation.
  • Residents are to be asked to fork out to pay for extra police and firefighters.
  • They had to fork out $ 100 to get the lorry repaired!
  • Just a few weeks after the green was opened, youths on motorbikes churned up the grass, and, in one week alone, the council was forced to fork out more than £1,000 to repair damage.
  • You don't ask people to fork out every time they drive up the motorways.
  • I had to fork out for a cab home.
  • I couldn't persuade him to fork out for a new one.
  • Then it is wallets at the ready as mummy and daddy start to fork out on designer romper suits, pushchairs and jewellery.
  • A sizzling workout last weekend encouraged connections to fork out the 15,000 supplementary fee. The Sun
  • No need to fork out for brands that make a song and dance about it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mr Croft said he will have to fork out a £50 excess on his insurance claim to repair the damage.
  • People will happily fork out nearly a quid for half a litre of clear liquid in a throwaway plastic container when a tap provides a perfectly acceptable alternative.

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