Example sentences of "[vb pp] to come [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The regulations originally were intended to come into effect on 11 September 1991 , but the commencement date was brought forward to 31 August .
2 A consultative paper , Investors Compensation Scheme : Proposed Changes to SFA Levy Allocation Basis , published by the Securities and Investments Board , is intended to come into effect on 1 April 1993 .
3 Coach trips will be targeted to come on market days and the council hopes to introduce special theme days based on Darlington 's history .
4 A new export-processing zone near Lomé , designed to attract foreign capital and develop non-traditional exports , was expected to come into operation after the publication of enabling decrees by the Council of Ministers in May 1990 .
5 FC/Open is expected to come into existence sometime next year in support of efforts to standardise high-speed fiber channel interconnects .
6 The ban is expected to come into force within 18 months .
7 The Treaty on European Union , which was signed at Maastricht on 7 February 1992 and is expected to come into force during 1993 , has widened areas where qualified majority voting applies before the Council .
8 The merger is expected to come into force on 1 July 1993 .
9 The rule is expected to come into force in 1988 when post-1939 buildings will become eligible for the first time .
10 The protocol disbanding the treaty , which called for the promotion of a gradual shift towards all-European security structures on the basis of agreements achieved at the Paris CSCE ( Conference for Security and Co-operation in Europe ) summit in November 1990 [ see pp. 37838-39 ] , was expected to come into effect by the end of the year , once it was ratified by all six parliaments .
11 People were expected to come on time , but that was accepted as Claudia being a bit eccentric .
12 And the government 's so called mum 's army proposals for teaching youngsters are expected to come under fire at a meeting in Nottingham later today .
13 The machines are expected to come with sample voices , a pronunciation dictionary and a speech synthesiser called QuickTalk as part of planned extensions to Macintosh System 7.1 .
14 That case is not expected to come to court for a few months and Dairy Crest wanted to stop him trading in the meantime .
15 The funds thus obtained , which would be repayable over a five-year period , represented only about 15 per cent of the estimated cost of making good damage to infrastructure [ see p. 38362 ] ; most reconstruction funding was expected to come from oil revenues .
16 With just four employees now , Goodfellow hopes that Sdirect will turnover £1m by the end of the year , 30% of which is expected to come from reseller deals .
17 For 1990-91 revenues and grants were forecast to increase by P653,000,000 over the revised 1989-90 budget to total P3,318 million , 63 per cent of which was expected to come from mineral exports .
18 Not all customers are expected to come by road — new mooring points and landscaping on the neighbouring Grand Union Canal welcome any barges that may need re-stocking .
19 Furthermore , the indecent haste with which regulation 64A was brought forward in the recess , and then — it must be unprecedented — replaced by another identical regulation 64A , designed to come into operation immediately the next day , in the middle of the 21-day period that a regulation is supposed to lie on the Table before being implemented shows not only the willingness but the eagerness of Ministers to block or restrict those entitlements .
20 They will be able to opt to have a transfer value paid into their new pension scheme at the end of the transitional period or to have their accrued pension rights in their STG scheme frozen to come into payment when they retire .
21 Suppose we want to suggest , for instance , that life began when both DNA and its protein-based replication machinery spontaneously chanced to come into existence .
22 He 's decided to come into motor sport and stands a good chance .
23 Unable to reach you by phone , he 's decided to come in person !
24 Concern about the public understanding of science often focuses on those occasions when scientists and the public are seen to come into conflict ; where , for example , scientific research is perceived as hazardous .
25 Duroc had had to come of age and replace the older Duroc in the service of Nguyen Seth .
26 ‘ There 's always a self-imposed pressure , especially when you 're starting out — ‘ Shit , I 've got to come through big-time on this ’ — but you just have to let it happen ; if it does n't happen today it 'll happen tomorrow .
27 She says today because I 've got the little boy with me I 've got to come by car unfortunately , but it 's far quicker on a bicycle and I do do it yes !
28 As far as I understand from the gossip there 's nothing 'll come out of it by goin' to the polis ; it 's got to come from Parliament .
29 And er when I first came to the shop , the mo m A lot of them used to come by train and you know taxis or meeting and at the station and and away from Holyhead they used to stop by the shop for fruit .
30 Its stimulant effect may account for its reputation as an aphrodisiac , its generic name being thought to come from satyr , S. hortensis ( summer savory ) is the annual ; S. montana ( winter savory ) a perennial shrub , whose leaves have a stronger , but less pleasant flavour .
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