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

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1 Boxer came out from the nearby farmhouse carrying a bag of oats and waved .
2 In his first reign at Everton , Kendall 's fortunes changed when his side came back from the dead in a Milk Cup tie against Oxford back in 1984 .
3 A few weeks later Patrick Ashby came back from the dead and went home to inherit the family house and fortune .
4 We passed like wraiths gripping our anoraks against a colder night wind coming down from the deep indigo silhouetted mountains .
5 The ‘ Lang comes back from the grave ’ phenomenon makes the whole election seem a disaster for the anti-unionist forces , but it was much less of one than 1979 .
6 My talk with Quintin had more content since he said that if another peer came down from the Upper House he would withdraw from public life whether he was in the Upper or Lower House .
7 Fearing a tragedy of epic proportions — her mind leapt at once to Penini and then to Miss Arabel — she knocked on the open door and Mr Browning came through from the other room , so haggard and drawn in contrast to his morning self that once more she was convinced something dreadful had happened .
8 Like Denny , Eamon McAuley came in from the cold last night for a good win ( pts 6 ) over Manchester visitor Russell Davidson .
9 From his new station he could see the three lakes — Loweswater , Crummock Water and Buttermere — lined up in the valley like three barges ready to be towed down to the shore ; he could see the bivouac huts of some woodmen and he spotted more than one flock coming down from the high pastures — but Mary chided him .
10 Fish come up from the deep sea in the early morning and the early evening .
11 Then , two minutes before the end of the game , the news came through from the other ground that Sunderland had lost .
12 But nobody cared for the stones he told And he sat all alone of a night Until one day a traveller came in from the cold A sorry and miserable sight .
13 Now , as the bloke said there , the only way you can do that with people coming in from the outside is that British Gas have got to keep pushing their prices up to make it worthwhile for somebody else to come in .
14 Creggan was watching the group of people coming along from the other direction and making a lot of noise .
15 Sculpture comes in from the far reaches of the Pavillon de Flore at the Louvre
16 It was Thursday 5 September and he was about to leave his office to drive to Bramshill Police College to begin a series of lectures to the Senior Command Course when the call came through from the private office .
17 When they went into their bedroom at night , cold air came up from the polished linoleum like air off an ice rink .
18 The co-existence of IP 3 Rs and RYRs may somehow help to integrate information coming in from the outside and to relay it throughout the neuron through the process of CICR already described .
19 A bright red Porsche came in from the wrong end , ignoring the arrows and signs .
20 Grants came in from the Welsh Office , Welsh Tourist Board and the local authorities allowing the newly formed Brecon Mountain Railway Company to take on permanent staff for line construction and a stone-faced workshop ( in keeping with other buildings in the National Park ) built at Pontsticill .
21 ON THE morning of Sunday , 18 December , exactly one week after the Great North struck , Pipeline came back from the dead .
22 All gullies , whether they take waste water from upstairs fittings ( via a hopper head ) or waste from kitchen sinks , must have traps to prevent smells coming up from the underground drains .
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