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

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1 In effect this has meant approximately 400,000 new and inexperienced customers coming on to the overseas market each year , and it is this that has kept the traditional inclusive tour package alive .
2 There will thus be an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange market .
3 This will therefore lead to an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange markets .
4 Are you coming down to the great burrow ? "
5 er he wants money coming in to the central fund er if has in two years time to face a , a trial , these allegations so be it , but meanwhile he wants the money to come in to the central fund for the reason he 's outlined
6 ‘ Did you now ? ’ said Hilary , coming in to the sick bay , which was really no more than a scruffy little room with only a slight hospital smell about it to bespeak its function .
7 Coming up to the additional assessment
8 We 're entitled now you know to have all sorts of things done at the doctors , coming up to the right age to be hav to be done er
9 I think he 's coming I think he 's coming up to the high week group , what is he ?
10 After her return , after that heart-sinking moment of coming back to the greasy frying pan and the littered table , there was cleaning .
11 Earlier rate cuts are beginning to filter through the economy and the retail trade is making optimistic noises about shoppers coming back to the High Street .
12 Even Mr Akers seemed slowly to be coming round to the sensible idea that IBM should be broken up .
13 A contract may be a contract , but Branson was now coming round to the belated realisation that a suitable gesture to Oldfield much earlier on in his career — increasing his royalty rate after Tubular Bells , for example — could have prevented all this ugliness .
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