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

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31 Her eventual release can only come about through the death of Doc and the proof of her recovery lies in her willingness to participate in a wedding-feast .
32 Better come over to the window . ’
33 You 'd both better come back to the farmhouse , and Mrs. Olinton will help you to clean yourselves and give you some tea .
34 You 'd better come back to the farmhouse too , Seb .
35 When you are ready , gently come back to the room and write down what the exercise revealed about your way-of-seeing the world .
36 Then gently come back to the room .
37 Then gently come back to the room .
38 Then gently come back to the room , and make notes on your resistance to change .
39 Celebrate your success , thank your helpers — and gently come back to the room .
40 Enjoy flowing with the river for as long as you wish — then gently come back to the room .
41 Then gently come back to the room .
42 Then gently come back to the room .
43 Then gently come back to the room .
44 Then gently come back to the room .
45 Then gently come back to the room .
46 Then gently come back to the room .
47 Then choose to walk away — and gently come back to the room .
48 She had evidently only come down to the foyer to collect her mail .
49 She 'd be able to think more clearly if she was away from Eastlake , and perhaps come up with the answer as to who was behind these menacing notes .
50 erm But it basically comes down to the attitude that people have , if the government was , or whoever owns the forest , private ownership , or whatever , controls what the loggers do , I mean it 's their forest it 's up to them to control what the loggers do and do n't do , and whether they let cultivators in or they do n't let cultivators in .
51 That this is so comes out in the way we say , for example , ‘ There is a pain in my foot ’ as readily as ‘ I feel a pain in my foot ’ .
52 Right , what we 're now going to do is incorporate that dummy variable as the regressor in our model as an explanatory variable , so what 's going to happen is that that dummy variable is turned off , alright in the first part of the sample right up until the war that dummy variable 's going to be off , right so it has a value of zero , right , then in nineteen forty through to nineteen forty five it 's switched on and what it 's going to do is to pick up any differential effects , right , in the intercept between wartime and peacetime right , we 'll talk a little bit more , more about that in a second , we 're going to add it in as a regressor , right , because it only comes on during the wartime it will pick up any shift in the intercept , right , that occurs due to the war if there is one , of course there may not be but it 's quite likely that there , there may well be , so if you type Q to come out of the data processing environment , go back to the action menu and test estimate forecast okay at the dialog box just add D one to your list of explanatory variables , alright then press the end key , right , yeah we 're gon na use the full sample right , we gon na use O L S , right you have now estimated the model with this dummy variable now just to see what 's happened to those coefficients the er incoming elasticity was at nought point six is now doubled right to one point one four more importantly , right , its T ratio has jumped from one point eight five right to six point eight , as a result , we now say that the incoming elasticity , the income coefficients , right , the significant zero , it 's important to explain the textiles as such the er , we are now getting a very different estimate for our
53 I can always remove it later if something better comes up in the interim .
54 Their application eventually came on before the court on the afternoon of 26 February 1992 .
55 I eventually came round in the Chamden General Hospital and on the slab next to me was club chairman , Ken Mentle , an oxygen pump beside him , a nurse frantically thumping his chest and Ken rambling deliriously about a Micky Deere scorcher from the penalty spot which had given us victory .
56 Along with the bruises , I was left with the problem of what to do in the Grand Final , and eventually came up with the idea of a prop stool which would collapse at the touch of a button and jump up again on its own .
57 They must have walked for at least three miles and eventually came out of the wood and on to a pathway which led to a crossroads .
58 In 1952 they started leaving sweet potatoes on the beach at the forest edge , as food for the macaques , which duly came out of the forest and ate them .
59 In the same year he became the chairman of the radical Green Ribbon Club , but he briefly and secretly came over to the court interest .
60 While little came out of the meeting between management and the shop stewards ' committee , it was an encouraging sign in a strike which appeared to have reached stalemate .
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