Example sentences of "have come into [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 A LITTLE more light has come into the lives of children at a Romanian hospital with the arrival of a BNFL generator which once provided back-up power for Capenhurst 's E21 centrifuge plant .
2 She has come into the Chamber in the past five minutes .
3 The one thing its citizens have in common is that God has come into the life of each one and given a love for him and for each other which no human or political institution can ever produce .
4 With our family and friends we sing our praises to God and in our prayers we say thank you that Jesus has come into the world to be with us for ever and ever .
5 With our family and our friends we sing our praises to God and in our prayers we say thank you that Jesus has come into the world to be with us for ever and ever .
6 The true dyed-in-the-wool , deep down Conservatives may feel uncomfortably that the sacred word has come into the hands of unsuitable people ; including the Americans .
7 They in turn have by defeat lost their rule which has come into the hands of the British .
8 Turning round 3-9 behind , Selkirk suddenly recognised that again they had the beating of the title favourites , their match winner , Ian Ballantyne , having come into the side at short notice .
9 ‘ I wondered if she might have come into the office on the Saturday ? ’
10 On the evidence of inscriptions recorded in the volume , it appears to have been in the possession of Amelia , Lady Lovat , in the 17th century , and John , 1st Duke of Atholl , in the 18th century : it seems to have come into the ownership of Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe in the 19th century , and from there to have passed to the Wigan Free Library .
11 For a period of the late 16th century it appears to have come into the possession of the Earls of Leicester but eventually came back into the full possession of Trinity College , which remained lord of the manor until quite recent times .
12 They had come into a gallery at the centre of which was a large glass case , round which the boys — apart from Khan and the Husayns — were crowded .
13 If , for example , old man Jordan had come into the kitchen at that moment , Wycliffe might have seen him in the mirror ; but what of it ?
14 Luke had come into the kitchen with the hat .
15 I found that so many new people had come into the scheme at the last moment that I was now four from the end .
16 No new blood had come into the affairs of de Chavigny for years : everywhere Edouard found stagnation and apathy .
17 By the turn of the century , the partnership of Jane Mason and G. Smith ran the mill , but by 1901 it had come into the hands of James Joiner , who had bought it from Crawshay and Co .
18 The lush farmlands of Combsburgh and the main trade of the little town had come into the hands of just a few landlords .
19 Mr. Philipson addressed an impassioned argument that it would be quite wrong for the court to vary the injunction at the behest of the defendants , seeing that they had flouted Morland J. 's order , as a result of which the documents had come into the hands of the Federal Reserve Board , who had in turn passed the information to the Bank of England ; and that it would be the antithesis of justice that the consequence of this misconduct should be the discharge of the very injunction which had been designed to protect the plaintiffs from these consequences .
20 Very few Unionists were Nonconformists and most of these had come into the party from the Liberal Unionist side .
21 When I traced my own family tree I found that the Heys had come into the parish of Penistone ( and more particularly to that part known as the township of Thurlstone where I lived ) about the year 1800 and that during the previous three centuries they had resided in Kirkburton parish immediately to the north .
22 Sixty-eight of the ninety family names recorded in the 1720s , that is three out of every four , were those of families which had come into the parish since the Elizabethan period .
23 He had come into the shop with her but had not followed her upstairs to the kitchen .
24 Sir Hugo Mallinger , in life as in architecture , does not want to reproduce the old , but his house is specifically contrasted with Grandcourt 's Diplow , ‘ a comparatively landless place which had come into the family from a rich lawyer on the female side who wore the perruque of the Restoration ’ .
25 It was suggested that this policy " be continued and issued to all concerned as AFHQ policy in the following form " : ( a ) No Jugoslavs , who are ( 1 ) Supporters of Mihailovitch ( Chetniks ) ( 2 ) Supporters of Nedic … ( 3 ) Croats ( 4 ) Slovenes ( 5 ) Miscellaneous refugees and dissident civilians , including women and children who have come into the hands of Allied troops will be returned to Jugoslavia .
26 No Yugoslavs who have come into the hands of Allied Troops will be returned direct to Yugoslavia or handed over to Yugoslav Tps against their will .
27 Five days earlier , on 22 May , it will be recalled , a discussion had taken place in G-5 at AFHQ on the " Disposition of Displaced Persons etc in N Italy and Austria " which had concluded that " no Jugoslavs … who have come into the hands of Allied troops will be returned to Jugoslavia against their will " .
28 The emphasis here is again clearly different to that of the AFHQ conclusion on 22 May that " no Jugoslavs … who have come into the hands of Allied troops will be returned to Jugoslavia against their will " .
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