Example sentences of "[noun] come in at the [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Fortinbras coming in at the end , when Hamlet 's dead and everyone 's dead . |
2 | In the morning the sun came in at the window and woke me . |
3 | Theda came to herself to find that she lay in a large four-poster bed , with the curtains drawn back , and the weak autumn sun coming in at the windows . |
4 | When the tax came in at the beginning of 1863 , vodka became cheaper and more readily available , state revenues held up , and the former monopolists of the retail trade began to invest their accumulated capital in railways , banks and mines . |
5 | The changes in legislation have been dramatic since the mid-eighties the majority of changes coming in at the beginning of nineteen ninety three with the E C directives . |
6 | I have heard that even if they lose 15 per cent of the money coming in at the moment , some of them could fold . |
7 | A person of ‘ quality ’ — such as a member of the landed gentry or the clergy — would be at the top of their scale , commanding a funeral similar to that organized by the College of Arms for a knight bachelor , with paupers and wayfarers coming in at the bottom . |
8 | In the main gatehouse tower on the first stack , Moray was asking of the guard-captain whether the Countess was at home when the door from the first of the bridge-corridors was flung open and a young woman came in at the run , hair blown , laughing-eyed , skirts kilted up the better to run , fine bosom tumultuous — as unusual a Countess of Dunbar and March as was the castle of which she was chatelaine . |
9 | So I do n't think there will be a big national impact , it 'll just be the last few people coming in at the tail end . |
10 | Deciding that his lead was comfortable enough to make a precautionary stop , Senna came in at the end of lap 48 . |