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

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1 They 'll all come off in the first wash .
2 ‘ The Indians who initally came here in the Sixties had skills and capital which allowed them to move into small businesses , ’ said Dr Owen , research fellow at the Centre for Ethnic Relations at Warwick University .
3 He just came on in the same purposeful manner and Maggie backed away , a little alarmed and suddenly remembering why she was here .
4 There are some aspects of our personalities which may not come over in the brief span of an interview , but which those close to us know only too well .
5 I think it 's the worse example of pure political self-indulgence that I have ever come across in the eight ye nearly eight years on this Council
6 Although one of the most interesting objects in the sale , it was not considered sufficiently rare — or Bavarian — to be among the items withdrawn from the sale at the instigation of the Bavarian State , which at the time of writing was still negotiating with Fürstin Gloria over what exactly will still come up in the future Regensburg sale .
7 But the modernisation of Greece will probably come faster in the late 1990s if there is now a period of four- or five-party politics .
8 So who were the Cagots , other , similar allusions to whom you will also come across in the western Pyrenees ?
9 ‘ If Sir Henry does n't come out in the next quarter of an hour , the path will be covered by the fog .
10 Now he then comes on in the second part of the report to look at the fourteen great achievements and I mean two things A what are those achievements and do those achievements back up and support these kinds of very general maybe propaganda kind of stances that Mao is taking up in the first part of this report .
11 It sometimes comes on in the open air .
12 It is a shock to have the battle of Helm 's Deep decided by the Ents and Huorns , who were last seen marching on Isengard , but whose powers have never come out in the open before .
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