Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] come in [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | A little money came in from The Character of Completeness , and he took Dinah out for supper in an hotel one Sunday , when she was not working . |
2 | British Rail comes in for a fair bit of stick from travellers who would heartily support the loud speaker announcement heard by Philip White . |
3 | There are two periods of Romanesque in Spain : the basic Spanish product , of buildings erected before the great southward expansion in the late eleventh century and a transitional style of Late Romanesque of twelfth and thirteenth century work , resulting both from this expansion and from the French influence coming in from the north-east . |
4 | Well there was one sad part was n't it that when I was on my in training during the and the rockets and so in classrooms and had a lecturer talking to us and erm this lad come in with a message from the teleprint and erm give it to the instructor , and he 'd call a name and the chap would go out . |
5 | The unsmiling housekeeper came in with the tea things . |
6 | J. Chapman , Sledmere Drive , Acklam , Middlesbrough : I was a final year pharmacy student in Sunderland and I was setting up apparatus for a chemistry experiment , when another student came in with the sad news that the King had died . |
7 | The inrush of fresh air came in through the room , circulated , inter mixed with the vapour laden air in the lounge . |
8 | One day a German officer came in to the camp to supervise work that was being done on some primitive drains by Polish forced labour . |
9 | Allen asked , and as though to point his question they came to a place where another track came in from the right . |
10 | Some guy comes in with a bandage around his head . |
11 | But i it grew slowly over the weeks and I think Christmas was an example of just the actual logistics of what we did at Christmas must be something of a feat in that so much stuff came in from the volume of presents and then the way in which they could be distributed . |
12 | What I find though , erm , becau my , because we got so much stuff coming in for the shop anyway , like the lettuce or the fruit and veg , my parents don , you know , like most people go , yo your mother probably goes , how many , how often does she make a shopping trip ? |
13 | ‘ Six months later , comprehensive education comes in in the county of Swessex . |
14 | A little breeze came in through the open window and set the hanging light swinging , so that her face was now shadowed , now glistening pale in the electric glare . |
15 | Every September we have the small ad hoc Cabinet committee known as the ‘ Star Chamber ’ [ MISC 62 ] in which Lord Whitelaw sits down and tries to bang heads together , and then the Prime Minister comes in at the last minute and bangs heads together even more . |
16 | The Senior Medical Officer came in with the Thoracic Registrar . |
17 | In a moment , the freckled landlady came in with the morning bacon , greeting us in the slightly questioning accent typical of Sligo . |
18 | And we used to have one gentleman come in from the country . |
19 | Whatever your circumstances , the point is that you should have enough money coming in in the Income column to meet the outgoings in the Expenditure column with , hopefully , a bit left over for rainy days and holidays . |
20 | Her face was a white blur under the dark cloak and hood she wore as protection against the fierce wind coming in off the sea . |
21 | And I went down to this bird 's down by the library two weeks ago and this same fella came in with a gram and he was like that , giving out big smokes . |
22 | Again , the light level was subterranean , but there were no curtains so a fair amount of yellow light came in from the streetlamps outside . |
23 | Elise Fox was a woman who prided herself on her ability to deal with crisis , but at eleven o'clock that Saturday night she still lay limp on the sofa in the flat , looking utterly shattered when her young sister came in from the kitchen with yet another pot of strong black coffee . |
24 | And the star of the show … the Russian Bear comes in from the cold . |
25 | I inspected the room in the faint light coming in around the shutters . |
26 | So one day , very hot and insecty , with a faint breeze coming in off the sea , we were all lying in the grass on the flat area just to the south of the house . |
27 | But perhaps those three are the ones you 'll , if it was a new person coming in to the job you 'd concentrate on that would n't you ? |
28 | 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 . |
29 | A young woman came in from the booking-hall trailed by a ragged child , its legs pocked with the marks of vermin . |
30 | By 1971 , hair had grown to collar length and the final phase came in as the smooth . |