Example sentences of "comes [prep] the [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Woodburn Junction box in 1988 as a football special returning to London comes off the truncated remains of the Woodhead line , now devoid of electrification . |
2 | When FDA clearance comes through the final product in a portfolio of basic food ingredients will be in place — promising the transformation of what has long been regarded as one of Britain 's most boring businesses into a world beater . |
3 | Such information comes through the formal provision of reports and scheduled meetings , but much comes from other , often brief , contacts . |
4 | Béarn comes between the Basque country to the west and the part of the central Pyrenees known as Bigorre to the east . |
5 | ‘ It 's now a tradition that she comes for the last week of the campaign , ’ he says . |
6 | The discovery of the impossibility of fleeing thus comes after the mental process of sizing up the situation denoted by saw , and this calls for the use of to . |
7 | The story of a children 's Christmas , climaxing in a party , comes towards the lower end of these two extremes , and we are going to take it as the plot on which can be built an interesting home movie . |
8 | Now it comes with the official blessing of German government sponsorship , a gift to the guilt of the American people . |
9 | A clue comes with the final disappearance of the cat , when it slowly vanishes , starting with the end of its tail and ending with the broad grin , which remains some time after the rest of the animal has gone . |
10 | The brief encounter often comes with the brief stopover in the oasis of a job . |
11 | It comes with the incredible value for money you expect from any product that carries the Valor name . |
12 | Cornwall tells him , ‘ the revenges we are bound to take upon your traitorous father are not fit for your beholding ’ ( III.vii.6ff. ) ) , he comes into the final stage of his career , moving from subject to object , first of Goneril 's love , then of Regan 's . |
13 | A fascinating new thing I learned during these sessions was ‘ feather care ’ , which , of course , comes under the general heading of the bird 's health and safety . |
14 | Refurbished 4–Cep unit No 1585 in London an South East Express two–tone brown ( jaffa cake ) livery comes under the impressive signal–box at Canterbury West working as the 12.03 Margate to Charing Cross via Ashford on 23 September 1986 . |
15 | Some of it is done by legislation which erm fire officers have to erm put to use er and , and work to erm and then there 's a lot of good will advice and , and help that can be given , er and publicity and training and so on which comes under the big wing of fire prevention . |
16 | Sadness comes from the incessant playing of the primeval recordings of the mind ; and these recordings are not noise alone but they are like films of horror . |
17 | The only counter-pressure comes from the dark side of human nature , the tear of ‘ the enemy ’ . |
18 | ‘ I think the sense of camaraderie among rock musicians comes from the traditional thing of playing together and sitting in on sessions , ’ elaborates Liam . |
19 | Finance comes from the recent sale of land near the track for industrial development . |
20 | The Lofthouse and Middlesmoor Prize Band played a selection of music ; a note in the feast programme remarked on the fact that the band comes from the upper end of Nidderdale , from which dale hailed the Netherdale Singers , who were paid five shillings — according to the church accounts — for appearing at Burnsall Feast in 1740 . |
21 | The problem comes from the apparent immunity of so many other characters . |
22 | Whether this comes from the apparent tolerance in the Eastern religions or from the Western dismissal of absolutes , the relativism of modern truth has a strongly corrosive effect on historic Christian conviction . |
23 | James Baker expressed on Aug. 10 the US view that Resolution 661 gave " the legal authority necessary to constitute such an embargo or blockade , provided the request comes from the legitimate government of Kuwait " . |
24 | It is called Kulta and it comes from the distant reaches of Lapland . |
25 | ‘ He keeps them from seeing the light shining on them , the light that comes from the Good News about the glory of Christ ’ ( 2 Cor. |
26 | Charles perhaps still more than his father regarded St Denis as both personal and dynastic patron ; and though the earliest evidence of this comes from the early years of his own reign , it was surely rooted in childhood habits . |
27 | The children come from East and West Sussex , although to my astonishment there 's one who comes from the far reaches of West Sussex , right away over erm the other side of Chichester . |
28 | Again , the term comes from the earliest attempts at explaining the disorder . |
29 | In my view the central threat to the countryside comes from the sheer numbers of people who want to buy a piece of it . |
30 | A good theatrical director knows that aggression comes from the right wing of a stage . |