Example sentences of "come [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 Sheer orders of magnitude matter , and the orders of magnitude do not come down on the side of the real-balance effect .
3 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 .
4 Inflation will come down through the use of high interest rates , as it has in the past .
5 Next time it might come down over the centre of a large city . ’
6 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 .
7 It is expected that the Home Office will come up with the rest of the money .
8 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 .
9 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 .
10 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
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 So erm I imagine they 'll come up during the course of the programme .
15 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 .
16 And furthermore , with the council tax , you could come up against the question of business rating for that .
17 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 .
18 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 .
19 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 .
20 ‘ 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 .
21 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 .
22 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 .
23 We have n't got a litter at present , you see , so she 'll come out with the rest of us . "
24 But so far you see , the er have been involved in it , who have been craftsmen , technicians have all come out of the end of a B Tec qualification with a distinction
25 I intend for fifteen twenty minutes or so , not to get into the issues of policy because you 've all got your own particular interests in that particular field and maybe that will come out during the course of the question and answer session .
26 We support the commitment in that Agreement that ‘ any change in the status of Northern Ireland would only come about with the consent of the majority of the people of Northern Ireland . ’
27 We support the commitment in the Anglo-Irish Agreement that ‘ any change in the status of Northern Ireland would only come about with the consent of a majority in Northern Ireland ’ .
28 The two governments undertook that ‘ … any change in the status of Northern Ireland would only come about with the consent of the majority of the people in Northern Ireland . ’
29 But changes in the home could also come about through the affairs of other family members .
30 This can only come about through the person of Jesus Christ .
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