Example sentences of "come [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | We can consider reasonably clear cut examples of the use of local landmarks and of home stimuli , but when we come on to a possible map sense we shall move into one of the more unsettled areas of the science . |
2 | So given that the electoral quota argument is not final , contrary to er what the commission implies and what seems to have been the brief given to the commission , the , we come on to the other points . |
3 | And then we come on to the final point , the whole issue of N H S changes in the final section . |
4 | Come on to the poisonous nature of carbon monoxide in a minute . |
5 | It is important to remember that a very large percentage of jobs never come on to the open market but are filled from within the firm , by people applying ‘ on spec. ’ or by people who hear about a vacancy from friends or colleagues working in the same field . |
6 | Now we come on to an immediate question , night flights which er there is concern about . |
7 | On the safety front , the water is thermostatically controlled , the sliding door and panel are glazed with safety glass and ceiling and basin lights come on with the main switch . |
8 | come on in the other room Michael , right , now you 've got your dummy |
9 | The ordered-segmentation approach shares the Marxist view that hooligans come predominantly from the lower-working class ( Dunning et al. , 1986 ; 1988 ) . |
10 | AN ERA ends today when the shutters come down for the last time at the Owen Owen store in Liverpool . |
11 | I had just checked into the hotel and come down to the sunken terrace when I saw armed men running in a crouched position by the swimming pool . |
12 | And if I come down with a sore throat now , I 'll know who to blame . |
13 | Two streams come down from a hilly hinterland and after a sedate infancy suddenly leap in a happy frolic through verdant surroundings to reach the village where they converge as the River Greta . |
14 | come down from the actual job |
15 | The notion that ideas come only from the professional specialists in the field must not be allowed to obtrude , nor the traditional ‘ we tried that and it did n't work ’ story . |
16 | The notion that ideas come only from the professional specialists in the field must not be allowed to obtrude , nor the traditional ‘ we tried that and it did n't work ’ story . |
17 | They come in as a net fare operator |
18 | come in through the open window , rape her , |
19 | Does the Wednesday ferry come in at the same time ? ’ |
20 | If relatives come in with a new resident , begin to get to know them as well . |
21 | Few are in any doubt that there is plenty more pain to come , and it may well be that the interim management is now expected to clear the decks , steel itself to announce another enormous net loss for the current quarter and let the new chief executive and team come in with a clean sheet . |
22 | May we , er , come in for a little while ? ’ |
23 | Like those boys that come in for a single rose as if nobody 's ever done that before . |
24 | So it 's two days out in the field with one of our trainers or top people and then they come in for the three day course . |
25 | That demand did not , of course , come entirely from the domestic market . |
26 | Add the tofu , breadcrumbs , Tabasco , margarine , soy sauce and pepper and blend until the ingredients come together as a smooth ball . |
27 | It is extremely important that all the factions — not just the clans but the sub-clans — in northern , southern and central Somalia come together under the United Nations plan for the ceasefire . |
28 | It recommended that the three Belfast teacher training colleges come together on a single site . |
29 | Groups come together for a specific reason and this reason should run like a thread through the liturgy as well as linking it to the whole community of the Church . |
30 | They finally come together at the lowest level of their relationship . |