Example sentences of "[adj] come [prep] the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | Charles perhaps still more than his father regarded St Denis as both personal and dynastic patron ; and though the earliest evidence of this comes from the early years of his own reign , it was surely rooted in childhood habits . |
2 | There are a hundred different ways of evaluating every piece of intelligence gathered so it is not hard to come to the wrong conclusions . |
3 | A systematic and documented approach will be more cost effective , auditable and more likely to come to the right conclusions . |
4 | The R&A 's next challenge is likely to come from the golf-equipment manufacturers . |
5 | ( b ) The equal balancing of the two melodic lines in this case , and , at the same time , making them sufficiently powerful to come through the orchestral tutti , presents little difficulty if the simple principles of doubling are well understood and applied . |
6 | If the fish are obtained from the same area the chances are that they all came from the same parents . |
7 | Though local government is important in Britain and there is some decentralized administration , the chief impetus and the major decisions all come from the central departments of state based in Whitehall . |
8 | But the politicking and the violence have nearly all come from the Spanish Basques ; French Basques have remained relatively quiet . |
9 | However , essential as that support is , perhaps the greatest drive of all comes from the normal dreams that all parents have for their children . |
10 | In any event we would like to know of any intending applicants for training , even if they are unable to come to the Potential Teachers ' Day . |
11 | Molla Gurani 's as kazasker ( an enlargement is given on p. 50 of the plates in Unver ) , for example , can not have been added before 845 , when he first came to the Ottoman lands , and was almost certainly added after 855 , when he held the kazaskerlik probably for the first and only time ( cf. below , pp. 169–71 ) , so that one can not be certain of the date when , or the circumstances in which , any of them was added . |
12 | At first most came from the British Isles and northern Europe , but from the 1880s increasing numbers arrived from central , southern and eastern Europe from the Austro-Hungarian Empire , Italy , Greece and the Russian Empire . |