Example sentences of "[conj] [vb mod] come [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The material that may come to the country from Iraq is highly enriched uranium .
2 Other possible approaches that may come to the rescue include interactive video , expert systems ( a form of ‘ machine intelligence ’ ) , and the use by tutors of authoring systems to produce at speed specific , computer-based ‘ lessons ’ made up of text , graphics , and self-assessment questions .
3 The heroine of the romance novel is presented at a moment of transition in her life , an isolated figure ; the romance narrative depicts young women at a point of defining themselves as adult women , a definition that must come from the heroine in the absence of any supportive network :
4 Anyone whose car has broken down in the middle of nowhere will appreciate the value of belonging to a motoring organisation that 'll come to the rescue at any time of the day or night .
5 There used to be er , a lady that used to come in the cinema when I worked there , and she had a
6 For the first 10 years of the Government , the cry that used to come from the Dispatch Box was that the economy was in a mess because of strikes by workers .
7 So th the sort of help that was that would come to the surface would it be at times like birth , death , accidents ?
8 The sort of pet that would come into the house and have a bit of birthday cake .
9 From today 's disclosures , it would appear that the savings that would come from the setting up of a small number of large authorities will be less than was originally suggested .
10 Catering for the resident population appears to be include catering for the population that will come into the town in order to do the new work that will be brought to the town by their policies .
11 If British Raik were seeking to finance this project entirely out of the relatively small amount of revenue that will come to the station from the operation of the services and from the surrounding property development , it would find that impossible .
12 Does he agree that that money underlines the huge benefits to the taxpayer that will come from the privatisation of the industry , to which the Labour party is opposed ?
13 This is not so much for reasons of hygiene , it should be added , but rather from fear of the pollution that can come from the demons of the dead , who are usually thought to harbour hostile feelings towards the living .
14 because there may be initiatives that can come from the factories er which would bring the thing alive also for local
15 ‘ Mike Phelan is fit again and could come into the reckoning , but I have plenty of options , ’ said the United manager .
16 Once feeding well , they will usually take frozen bloodworm without any trouble , and will come to the surface if they should see an earthworm .
17 Sun Microsystems Inc has denied that it has plans to develop a Sparc implementation of Microsoft Corp 's NT operating system , as reported last week in the US paper Open Systems Today : the paper quoted Sun president Scott McNealy as saying ‘ NT needs to be ported to Sparc — if they [ Microsoft ] do n't do it , they are missing the boat ’ ; despite the denials , observers hint darkly that some sort of effort involving Sparc and Microsoft is under way , and will come to the surface over the next few months .
18 Despite the denials , observers hint darkly that some sort of effort involving Sparc and Microsoft is underway , and will come to the surface over the next few months .
19 From that assessment , a group to be known as the Trailblazers will be formed and will come under the guidance of the Cliff Richard Development Trust , which is already supporting some 11 youngsters who previously progressed from the former Search for a start scheme .
20 These four , Caroline , Jocelin , Paul and Edward , refused to attend the C. C.U. Congress , but would come to the party afterwards , on Saturday night .
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