Example sentences of "[verb] come [adv] with [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I have already discussed the notion of relative novelty in the course of an analysis of habituation ( Chapter 2 , pp. 44–5 ) and failed to come up with hard evidence that might require us to accept its reality .
2 It was England who crept off , licked their wounds , and tried to come up with all sorts of weird and wonderful reasons for us beating them .
3 He warned : ‘ We can not be expected to come up with good ideas if the Government continues to reduce our budget every year .
4 Sun 's SunPro unit is expected to come out with new compiler technology to allow applications to take advantage of HyperSparc — and Viking — features , indeed Sun 's whole SunWorks compiler set is now being readied for an overhaul .
5 Armagh Language Centre , based at the local College of Further Education , has come up with two courses in European Studies and English Language .
6 It has come up with five colour TXT systems each powered by a 40MHz Texas Instruments Inc TMS340 processor .
7 To prevent a messy legal battle , the TODAY casting couch has come up with alternative stars for the role of Liz and seventh husband Larry .
8 Following the announcement of its pact with StrataCom Inc and Cisco Systems Inc , AT&T Co has come up with sketchy details of the Asynchronous Transfer Mode service it will begin offering early next year .
9 The archaeological researcher John Barnatt has recently re-examined alignments , first noted last century , of stone circles onto key peaks on Bodmin Moor in or a wall , and has come up with favourable results .
10 In addition , IDC has come up with some projections that indicate not everybody is buying the hype .
11 Delving deep into its archives it has come up with some winners , not least a luscious 1947 performance of Bax 's The Garden of Fand that I once possessed and enjoyed in its original , 78 rpm form .
12 For mums who want something more convenient than hanks of cotton wool , Púr has come up with Little Tearaways , sheets of flat , highly absorbent 100% cotton wool .
13 The spartan nature of camping requires that you live on dehydrated food , and since at the time of going to print no manufacturer has come up with dehydrated beer , enforced sobriety will be a big feature of your expedition .
14 ‘ I 've run fifteen variations of that conversation , and every one has come up with different motivations for the Doctor .
15 has come up with three sponsors to ‘ underwrite ’ half the costs of the show ( £200,000 ) Silhouette Eyewear , Vistech Redab property developers , and The Times and hope that a box office success will make up the balance .
16 And , seeing as no one has come forward with any information about this killing , I supposed we 're meant to think that no one saw anything . ’
17 Nobody has come forward with any car numbers ; and nobody has reported any sudden explosion of the fox population in the countryside . ’
18 I am told that there have been further incidents since the system reopened but so far nobody has come along with any details .
19 Mrs Clamp has come across with some details on sporadic occasions , too , though they are probably no more to be relied on than what my father 's told me .
20 The decision to hold Course IV in this way has come about with some reluctance and a great deal of heart-searching and concern .
21 The growth of its domination of policy initiation has come about with growing state intervention in society and the increasing extent and complexity of the policy-making process .
22 Objective probability applies to those events which have been tested previously and found to come up with consistent results .
23 Last autumn he won round one when President Bush appointed him to lead a cabinet ‘ empowerment task force ’ , told to come up with specific proposals .
24 half G T half G T squared plus some constant times time normally your the the G will be a negative half A T squared but someone had said come up with that equation , and you 've said well what are you going to give me to go on well the acceleration 's constant .
25 They do n't want me paying d you know like their pension deferred , so if you 're serious about the fu pension fund managers paying , we 're talking y you know earlier you said four hundred and eighty million whatever it is lost , they 're paying a third , pension fund managers have got to come up with that sort of sum .
26 But I think it is important for us to er , as an individual authority as well as working with other authorities , to actually keep up the pressure on the Ministry to , to let them know that this is n't going to go away , and that they 've got to come up with some answers which are , which are going to try and satisfy people .
27 The problem I think comes when you go when you become insolvent , you know , and I think that 's and so therefore unless we 're going to come up with some system where we do insure our pensions as we do our home , then you , you , you 're still back to the basic contract between a company and an individual .
28 They may have a slight perturbation on the behaviour of the school teachers , because they 're going to come back with some ideas which the school teachers will find slightly foreign to them .
29 But this shift of focus , which as we shall see came about with remarkable suddenness through the 1920s , is the primary clue to the shape of more recent developments .
30 A cliché in Beowulf 's time , I know , but you ca n't keep coming up with new games .
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