Example sentences of "come [adv] in [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Dyspnoea ; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation , a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep , a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck ; neck is very sensitive to touch . |
2 | Perhaps they would come together in a future incarnation — not the next , probably , but perhaps the one after . |
3 | As we shall see , there are other and less familiar ways in which genes from different ancestors can come together in a single descendant . |
4 | And the bills will come anyway in the normal way to , to , to the , it 's got pushed into the dike , and it 's gone down afew , it 's got pushed into the dike , and it 's gone down afew y thirty pounds maximum are we agreed ? |
5 | There are some aspects of our personalities which may not come over in the brief span of an interview , but which those close to us know only too well . |
6 | They 'll all come off in the first wash . |
7 | Although one of the most interesting objects in the sale , it was not considered sufficiently rare — or Bavarian — to be among the items withdrawn from the sale at the instigation of the Bavarian State , which at the time of writing was still negotiating with Fürstin Gloria over what exactly will still come up in the future Regensburg sale . |
8 | I said well I 'm gon na come up in the next hour and I wan na |
9 | Intor would not produce electricity , that would come later in the so-called demonstration plant . |
10 | ‘ If Prost wants to be called champion for a fourth time he should come back in a sporting way . |
11 | Because even as you die you know that you will come back in a different hat . |
12 | Mummy will come back in a few minutes , wo n't she , for Susie ? ’ |
13 | Grant , the people could come back in a few minutes |
14 | erm I think the consensus is that you would n't — that either space is infinite , or at the very least it it 's finite it has no edge , so if you went in one direction for long enough you would come back in the other direction . |
15 | ‘ If Sir Henry does n't come out in the next quarter of an hour , the path will be covered by the fog . |
16 | And I have no doubt that their stalemates will come out in the same vein tomorrow morning , together with the rest of them . |
17 | So who were the Cagots , other , similar allusions to whom you will also come across in the western Pyrenees ? |
18 | we argued there that erm scale of migration was not necessary to be contained within Leeds and Bradford , to promote regeneration because we 're s we 're now , we have now exhausted all our brown field sites to the extent that we 've had to take land out of our greenbelt , but there we were looking at something in the order of four thousand dwellings in three dris districts , spread over fifteen years , and we might reasonably assume that they 'd come forward in a dispersed manner on a site by site basis er and be relatively small scale , certainly we would be looking at the local plans which flow from this alteration to make sure that will be the case , now a new settlement 's a completely different animal , you would have to come forward quickly otherwise it would not be regarded as a success , it would it would need wide publicity , perhaps across the whole region , maybe even beyond , it would be a a major attraction to anybody thinking of moving house er from Leeds to a a location which would be accessible to them to retain their employment in Leeds , so I think we were talking about two different things entirely , more than that Mr Brighton 's su suggested that fifteen hundred would not be an adequate scale , it would have to be , I think two thousand five hundred was his figure , er Mr Timothy 's suggested th the same sort of thinking , and Mr Brook to , that the the settlement would have to get bigger , erm which only compounds our problem , any any settlement which grew larger and larger and inevitably would contain more employment as well as housing would become more of a threat to the regeneration of Leeds and , perhaps to a lesser extent Bradford , and it 's on |