Example sentences of "come [adv prt] [prep] [art] [num ord] [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 You add up all the bills you know will come in over the next year — plus a bit more for contingencies — and divide by twelve .
3 Other potential candidates , who were remaining loyal to Ted but who it was known would come in on the second ballot if Ted were defeated , were quietly being accused of cowardice by the Neave camp .
4 I 've brought him , I 've brought him at half five , because I was at the bus stop , leaning on the lamp-post and it was about twenty five past , and then he did n't come along to the next stop by and it got to twenty five
5 Or Jagger would come over from the next hotel and we 'd have late night ‘ looning ’ sessions , and then Angie and I would go off again with Zowie .
6 They 'll all come off in the first wash .
7 So it 'll come up at the next C S N T .
8 In due course ( usually about the end of January ) such Bills will come up for a second reading , i.e. they will appear again on the order paper for consideration during private business , the first item on the Houses ' agenda after prayers , usually 2.35 to 2.40 or 2.45 p.m .
9 I said well I 'm gon na come up in the next hour and I wan na
10 The first 15 overs yielded only 30 and the 100 did not come up until the 35th over .
11 ‘ I never seen anybody come back for a second dose of the blue , ’ said a man behind her , for all the world as though he were safe reminiscing in some bar of his old age .
12 Gazza did not even come out for the second half — he had proved all he needed to prove to any disbelievers still out there .
13 ‘ If Sir Henry does n't come out in the next quarter of an hour , the path will be covered by the fog .
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