Example sentences of "come [adv] [prep] the [noun] of " in BNC.
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1 | For long periods , this somewhat improbable lake is so safe and tranquil that visitors can come right to the edge of the crater , without the least hazard . |
2 | No , no they just take your word for it and now I have got as I said , I 've got that , I 've got to paint that over and reseal and I 've got to make sure that nobody makes a mess in there , but the plumber said what you really need to do is to get rid of this cheap and tatty , horrible plastic tray which does n't come right to the edge of the tiles |
3 | Paul spends most of the rest of his letter dealing with the problem in Corinth ; he does n't come down on the side of being totally separate or of being totally indistinguishable in lifestyle — but you 'll have to read that for yourself . |
4 | Sheer orders of magnitude matter , and the orders of magnitude do not come down on the side of the real-balance effect . |
5 | But this what the act says on this particular point — it 's interesting to see because it really does come down on the side of integration . |
6 | Inflation will come down through the use of high interest rates , as it has in the past . |
7 | Next time it might come down over the centre of a large city . ’ |
8 | Unix vendor Sequent Computer Systems Inc last week announced details of a new line of symmetric multprocessing systems running Microsoft Corp 's Windows NT operating system which will come in at the low-end of its product range . |
9 | Proof that these ailments are essentially genetically determined can come only through the knowledge of the DNA sequences of these genes and their variants . |
10 | A stroke does not come suddenly at the age of 75 or 80 and finish life . |
11 | The Environmental Health Officers who are highly trained in all aspects of health and hygiene , are ‘ in the business of changing people 's behaviour — as hygiene does not come naturally to the majority of people ’ . |
12 | Let's come away from the top of the stairs cos it 's Right |
13 | ‘ But at least I could come close to the song of electricity . |
14 | Sound would come both through the material of the door itself and around all the edges . |
15 | It is expected that the Home Office will come up with the rest of the money . |
16 | Got to try and come up with the rest of them that 's how they done it , a couple of days after somebody re-enact that again . |
17 | I am sincerely hoping Hydro Aluminium Metals Ltd , whose managing director Albert Smith may be known to you , will come up with the bulk of this sum . |
18 | Er certainly the surplus was used to er create a new scheme for the present contributing members and er to the maximum benefit of the new sponsoring company , which er in the pensioners view er certainly er caused a great lack of security to the fund in our view of what they have done and er it is of in our opinion a matter of public concern and that we welcome the opportunity and I believe that you said previously that you 're gon na come up on the ownership of surplus , so perhaps getting away from it |
19 | In more recent times , Al Stewart has donated ‘ Here 's To Warren Harding ’ , recalling how the 29th President was ‘ Alone in the White House , watching the sun come up on the morning of 1921 ’ ; Elvis Costello has resurrected bluesman J B Lenoir 's ‘ Eisenhower Blues ’ ; Tom Paxton advising that ‘ Lyndon Johnson Told The Nation ’ ; while , only a week ago , U96 released ‘ I Wan na Be A Kennedy ’ , just another of the scores of Kennedy songs that have proliferated through rock since ‘ 62 . |
20 | I still add my own research , and usually something will come up during the course of the interview that means you can leave the game plan anyway . |
21 | I still add my own research , and usually something will come up during the course of the interview that means you can leave the game plan anyway . |
22 | So erm I imagine they 'll come up during the course of the programme . |
23 | Certainly as far as Americans are concerned , a lot of our hotels do n't come up to the standards of service that they are used to , and certainly they do n't think they 're value for money . |
24 | And furthermore , with the council tax , you could come up against the question of business rating for that . |
25 | I 'll come back to the issue of sustainability I think under one B when we get to individual districts , but it does seem to me it 's rather overstated . |
26 | does n't it come back to the issue of wh who they trustees are and who 's interest , given that trustees are expected to be independent , in the end , who 's interests do the trustees represent , because I 've had experience of working with a pension fund that was in massive surplus and the actualar actuaries refused to agree their final report until that surplus was dealt with , so that the trade unions and the employer through the trustees had to negotiate a way of spending that surplus and er given the pressures of the actuaries to say we were not allowed th the funds to continue unless you deal with this surplus , then it comes back to the issue of how the Board of Trustees is made up and if we accept that there is a degree of representation on that Board , then just exactly how that representation is divided . |
27 | First , however , we must come back to the question of how to read a contingency table when one variable can be considered a cause of the other . |
28 | ‘ Pilots are the most important factor in the treatment of an engine ’ , commented Tony , who has seen several powerplants come back to the care of his team long before they need have done , had they been handled correctly . |
29 | IF BILL CLINTON were to look to Florida for advice on how to pass a health-care bill , the answer might come back in the words of Lyndon Johnson : better to have your enemies inside your tent pissing out , than outside pissing in . |
30 | Ultimately , this state of affairs can only work to the advantage of our trainees , who will come out at the end of their programme with an eminently marketable collection of skills . |