Example sentences of "to come [adv prt] [prep] [art] new [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | But I cooled him out and he agreed to come along to a new rehearsal place that we 'd found , The Rose And Crown in Wandsworth . |
2 | After a two-hour meeting , the Lib Dem leader , Jim Wallace , said his party had given the organisation another chance to come up with a new way forward . |
3 | It wants vendors to use the P5 code name until the chip is formally announced , and has invited employees to come up with a new name that stresses 80386 and 80486 compatibility — so the RISC 86 suggestion did not get a warm welcome . |
4 | Stung , the League said yesterday that they expect ITV to come up with a new date within the next fortnight and they will not tolerate one beyond the scheduled season 's end of May 5 . |
5 | Now writers are trying to come up with a new story for Willis as rival studios race to cash in on the Die Hard formula . |
6 | BAeSEMA has been contracted by the navy to come up with a new design for bridges incorporating the latest in ergonomic practice . |
7 | This left five days for the Patent Office and its advertising agency , Ayer , to come up with a new version . |
8 | The SSC will hold a meeting in June , when all sorts of would-be participants will try to come up with a new detector . |
9 | Workers at Britain 's Institute of Geological Sciences aim , however , to come up with a new set of tools that can indicate minerals much further under the ground . |
10 | Even now , however , he is prepared to accept that he may not be able to come back in a new guise after three years . |
11 | ‘ We wanted to play Dublin but all the venues were booked out months ago , so we 'll have to come back in the New Year and do somewhere like the SFX or the Stadium . |