Example sentences of "[adv] come to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Very often the vagina and part of the uterus can be separated into two parts by a fibrous partition and this may only come to light after difficulty when intercourse first takes place , or sometimes at the onset of pregnancy .
2 There was one hope which Rosen kept to himself and which would only come to light when Kennedy responded .
3 Some of these effects were immediate ; others will only come to light in time , if at all .
4 I think I mean it was interesting cos someone said earlier about people coming in I mean once you get them in I mean I always feel it 's like the pantomime each year which is an amateur pantomime yet the actual people coming in to see that I mean it 's well in the ninety per cent 's and you talk to people when they come to see the pantomime and ver invariably the the mum 's or dad 's say no I do n't normally come to theatre but I come to the pantomime and they enjoy it very much and when you talk to them they can say well what you think of it ?
5 The case did not come to trial until 1963 .
6 In practice the question of the duration of the disability imposed by the springboard doctrine does not frequently arise because most cases concerning confidential information do not come to trial following the grant of an interlocutory injunction and it can therefore be assumed that either the parties settle the action or that interlocutory judgment is treated as final .
7 The three did not come to trial until last week when they were each imprisoned for four years .
8 They do not come to school as empty vessels .
9 Parents were told last night that their children should not come to school due to the appalling standard of cleanliness resulting from the employment of contract cleaners .
10 The judge 's decision means that the case will not come to court before early 1991 , when the issues will be decided in the context of the individual cases .
11 This explains why cases do not come to court when the conditions of my comically weak description of the explicit extension of our legal conventions are met , which is most of the time .
12 A newsletter writer of August 1692 complained that it was impossible to distinguish between those who did not come to church because they were attending conventicles and those who did not worship God at all , and he predicted the result would be the downfall of the Church of England followed by the triumph of popery .
13 Yet of course many projects do not come to fruition for very many years , and large important projects lead to adverse short-term cash flows .
14 ‘ I am desperately sad that our scheme did not come to fruition but I am glad that someone will take it over and bring these jobs to the area .
15 I also got two fleshy herrings and a couple of smoked mackerel ( and a few tiny pieces of sole to put in the freezer as , sadly , John 's nephew and nice Irish girlfriend can not come to supper this weekend — they were IMMENSELY cheering and encouraging when here recently ) .
16 But unlike them she did not come to office during a wartime emergency nor head a coalition government .
17 People usually start to feel better about a problem when they have some explanation for it , but hang-ups relating to very early patterns of relating between mother and baby which we have been describing may not come to light within the time normally allowed for this type of treatment .
18 The swop did not come to light until Arlena , who suffered from a congenital heart defect , had to undergo surgery .
19 The same is true throughout the world of course : laws and regulations are made by men , and the fact that an aircraft was built or operated in compliance with those laws and regulations is , in itself , no guarantee that it will not come to grief .
20 And thirdly , his world contained a great number of Christian knights , professional warriors , lords of unrule : if he could but find a holy cause , a just war , God 's war , for them to engage in outside the frontiers of Europe , what might they not achieve , what peace might not come to Christendom ?
21 These multitudinous associations — and more could easily come to mind — prepare us for a sentimental reunion scene ( if it is Emma ) or an adoption scene ( 'Let me be your father' , etc . ) .
22 One does not expect , nor I trust want , to find shiny wooden chalets , let alone tall concrete apartment blocks standing arbitrarily up in this fascinating landscape , and phrases about ‘ cosmopolitan cesspits ’ can easily come to mind as you stand looking at them .
23 But the ideals of the purist must always come to grief in the devastating vortex of national politics .
24 That was long afore my day but th they used to always come to curtain market , aha .
25 Can it ever come to life again , not as a bait and hook for politicians to use , not as a shouting for soccer fans ?
26 The grass is so dry it seems impossible that it can ever come to life again : yet the huge acacia trees along the riverbed are putting out blossom , delicate sprigs of green in anticipation of the rains to come .
27 If Labour could not win at a time of economic gloom , bolstered by the most effective campaign it has ever fought , and facing a Government whose campaign did not really come to life until the last 10 days — then when could it ?
28 I think my characters could really come to life in a film ’ .
29 I think my characters could really come to life in a film ’ .
30 France 's increased commitment to space , which dates from the late 1950s , did not really come to fruition until the late 1970s .
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