Example sentences of "[noun sg] have come [art] " in BNC.

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1 VICTIM SUPPORT has come a long way from the six-month experiment set up 10 years ago by a group of concerned professionals in Bristol .
2 With economic change has come the emergence of both areas and social groups of disadvantage , which have attracted the attention of analysts and observers with an intensity accorded to the social and environmental problems of deprived London a century ago .
3 The money has come the Government 's waiting list initiative .
4 Lovers of freedom throughout the world looked to this vision with hope and it is with profound sadness that they see the vision momentarily dimmed , and with this dimming has come a confusion of purpose and a sense of despair that was never known before in America .
5 The industry has come a long way since the day 's of men selling cornets from the back of bicycles .
6 One-room living has come a long way from the old bed-sitter image with its general note of poverty and desperation .
7 As he had grown older , his anger had turned to cold bitterness , and creeping into his mind had come the idea of revenge , something subtle enough to humble his mother , make her realize that he lived , without killing her .
8 After the film noir of punk had come the escapist musical spectacular of ‘ the new pop ’ , demonstrated in a wild flamboyance which banished the austerity of punk rock to the shadows .
9 With this decline in spiritual and political influence has come an economic slide .
10 Mr Fallon said : ‘ The Dyslexia Institute has come a long way since 1973 and has raised the profile of dyslexia in the country .
11 With peace had come the School 's first Sixth Form as that term is understood today , with nine members .
12 But the industrial robot has come a long way since the early sixties when Joe Engelberger set up Unimation , the world 's first industrial robot making company .
13 Air refuelling has come a long way from the first attempts in the thirties where the co-pilot literally popped out and grabbed the hose .
14 The Sputnik demonstration of Soviet technological capabilities had made Foster Dulles ’ philosophy of massive nuclear retaliation untenable , and in its place had come the theory of imposing a pause with conventional forces to allow time for last-minute negotiations to reduce the chances of mutual nuclear suicide .
15 He gives as an example of this the growth of a ‘ pornocracy ’ and through the break-up of the sex-procreation nexus has come the increasing commodification of pleasure — the developing range of sex-pleasure items on the market .
16 It sounds like the Fire Service has come a long way from the early years .
17 Joy to the world — the Lord has come a .
18 With improvements in educational technologies , more detailed understanding of how behaviour is controlled and developed , and a greater focus on curriculum planning has come a flood of new opportunities for people with learning difficulties .
19 The humble fryer has come a long way since the days when it was little more than a heating element and a thermostat .
20 We made ball and roller bearings for the car trade , the car trade had come a slump and the car trade to this day does n't want one bearing or one detail for a car until it 's ready to put it on a car .
21 ‘ The dog 's come a long way , ’ said another man .
22 With the increased responsibility and responsiveness has come an increase in the volume of management activities .
23 Man had come a long , long way from his hominoid ancestry .
24 Curtain hardware has come a long way since the days of the narrow brass rod and rings .
25 Even if men 's fashion has come a long way since the Sixties , the overwhelming inspiration , Cerruti concedes , is still the archetypal English businessman 's suit .
26 But with understanding had come a growing determination that she would never fall into the same trap — would never allow herself to be ruled by a foolish , hoping heart .
27 Into this situation have come a few rude intrusions .
28 Contemporary psychology has come a long way from the time when J. B. Watson , the first behaviourist , forbade the consideration of non-observable entities .
29 BED and Breakfast has come a long way since the days when fearsome dragon landladies belched fire and brimstone over their terrified guests .
30 Surprisingly , out of this mish-mash has come a positive development , in which the public sector institutions are giving the idea of ‘ an academic community ’ a completely new reality .
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