Example sentences of "come [adv] to the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 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 .
2 And then we come on to the final point , the whole issue of N H S changes in the final section .
3 Come on to the poisonous nature of carbon monoxide in a minute .
4 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 .
5 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 .
6 A message was then broadcast asking Sir Ralph Grunte , Member of Parliament , to please come straightaway to the administrative desk in the lobby , as ‘ a matter of urgency ’ .
7 We come finally to the confluent form of Sylvester 's expansion for any polynomial , and again we use the matrices A and B as exemplifying the general case ; however , for greater generality we shall write the repeated roots as unc the unrepeated root as unc and shall replace the unit in the superdiagonal of unc by r .
8 You can also circle your hips , swooping down to your heels as you go round and come up to the other side !
9 ‘ The confiscation of proceeds from drugs crimes makes it difficult for traffickers to salt away their funds , do time and come out to the high life . ’
10 So we come back to the one explanation which resolves every difficulty : the ‘ discovery ’ made by the monks of Canterbury in 1120–21 , as the canons of York at once realized , was the moment of their enlargement .
11 They wo n't do away with them , no but cos they , they 're trying to do away with the National Dock Labour Board and come back to the old system .
12 Then we come back to the big man up front .
13 Colleagues , I now come back to the special report and will take speakers from the regions .
14 are now going to look at these figures and come back to the next meeting er with some comments , with regards to their projects .
15 two fifty to ten twenty nine , well , come back to the same sort of time , the hour just before that , say two fifty to nine fifty , what would two fifty to nine fifty be ?
16 Well I think I , I mean I do agree and I think that the that er that pressure is now getting on to these , these city institutions , but erm , but I still come back to the basic thing that , that really , you know what appears to me is happening is we 've we 're having literally millions of pounds taken out in , in issuing these massive massive writs you know , a hundred and seventy eight page writs are sort of being and really the money for those is coming out of the remaining money in our pension funds and really I feel that what wou what is happening is this , as far as I 'm concerned , is all due to the self-regulatory body being set under the Financial Services Act , and in a way I feel that you know we 're being made to pay for sorting out a mess that somebody else is making .
17 We come now to the final committee report which is on page thirteen of the page thirteen .
18 Patients from all over the area come here to the Regional Haemophilia Centre at the Churchill Hospital at Headington .
19 Gradually all the parties come around to the same view .
20 But as a literal succession of images they come closer to the disconnected temporality of the succession of perceptual memories in the unconscious .
  Next page