Example sentences of "[conj] come [adv] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Now the major problem that came up the other day was that , I thought I had given you a very easy extract to translate into modern English , and it turned out not to be such an easy extract , obviously .
2 But even then , there are massive periodic bills that come round every second generation — a major roof repair , a bit of bad luck like serious dry rot .
3 The overlords at Citroen say it 's just a show car , but with Peugeot and Citroen able endlessly to vary the mix of 605s and XMs that come off the shared line at Sochoux , a third model , an XM coupe , is not an impossibility .
4 Both country 's leaders were from the same generation Clinton is 46 , Major 49 and came up the hard way , she added .
5 Duncan and Lisburn 's Neil McGrann were side by side after 50 metres , but it was the Ards swimmer who produced that little bit extra and came home a comfortable winner in a time of 1.10.13 .
6 I went in feeling very poorly and not much good for anything and came out a new woman .
7 He spent three months there and came out a changed man .
8 The pellet went right through the cat 's neck and came out the other side , leaving a gaping wound .
9 So she went and bought some in Lincoln and came back the next day and got down on her knees and cleaned it all up .
10 And coming back the other way .
11 In fact , George Every , then a lay brother at Kelham , with whom I had started a correspondence , told me later that Eliot , while praising some individual points , had said that the general impression it gave was of material being put through a machine and coming out the other side more or less as it was before .
12 Things would deteriorate rather quickly , for Alberto would return to his hotel in the evening with a sculpture eight to twelve inches tall under his arm and come back the next day with a piece no more than three or four inches high …
13 ‘ I 've seen babies lose all their hair and come out a different colour . ’
14 If it was n't you could walk through a hail of machine-gun fire and come out the other end without even a scratch . ’
15 between the flats and come out the other end .
16 But we were able to work through it and come out the other side .
17 And come out the main door .
18 I guess he must have seen him go in sometime late , and come out the next morning . ’
19 I was annoyed when came back the last time and I thought oh my goodness I hope I have n't given that woman any annoyance .
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