Example sentences of "[that] come [prep] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If the EEC were to acquire its own resources , then the organisation would lose the element of control over its spending that came with the existing system of national contributions : Hallstein could then argue that giving the European Parliament more authority would provide the necessary democratic control over the Commission .
2 They started drinking before the parson ever arrived and , when he did , fell upon the beer kegs that came on the same cart as though they were men dying of thirst .
3 Among the dream visions that came to the strange visitor to the Clydeside were ‘ The Spanish Military Nun ’ , ‘ The Revolt of the Tartars ’ , and ‘ On the knocking at the gate in Macbeth ’ .
4 This was anticipated that there would be some add-on to the report that came to the last committee .
5 The four healthy children lay sound asleep , their breaths coming and going almost visibly in the light from the street lamp that came through the flowered cotton curtains .
6 In fact , as of July 1991 , only one concentration that was a merger in the traditional sense of the word , which was between two Japanese banks , had been notified to the Commission ; the rest were concerned concentrations that came within the wider definition .
7 The howl of dissent that came from the entire room staggered me .
8 Suddenly the stillness was broken by a distressful wail that came from the other side of the square .
9 I suppose the ones that came from the old factory , you know were kept on and that
10 They were both so angry that they did not immediately see the movement that came from the old female 's shelter in the cage between them .
11 Global warming or any of the thousand other worries that come under the environmental heading may or may not have a sound scientific basis , but subjective judgement is still required to determine what priority to give them , and what rules , actions and expenditure are justified to relieve them .
12 Still , when it comes to the treatment of the frontiers of computing , the areas of advanced research that come under the general heading of ‘ artificial intelligence ’ ( AI ) , there is still a great deal sadly lacking .
13 This leaves non-meanings ; but non-meanings are a vast class , comprising logically most diverse elements and including a large sub-class of topics that come under the general heading of " fiction " .
14 Secondly , any changes that come to the primary schools must come as a result of changes at the secondary level .
15 The church has other features too that come from the Moorish Spain of the Middle Ages : above all , the queer openwork stone screens that are set into the window embrasures , hewn crudely but winningly into geometric patterns .
16 The new ideas , that come from the grey area where energy and matter interchange , need new words , just as rough country needs Land-Rovers ; without the vocabulary , the traveller in new ideas is permanently aboriginal .
17 That w that is exactly at twenty five , and that is allowing a doubling of the housing area to allow for all the other features that come within the new settlement .
18 I have also seen the important comments of the CBI , which set out the fact that Britain now attracts nearly half of all the inward investment from Japan that comes to the European Community .
19 Then there 's another neck that comes across the other way and you can tune the strings any way you want ; I basically tune to groups of diatonic notes with whatever melody I want to play .
20 The " healing " is therefore done between sufferers rather than from staff to patients and is the equivalent of the group insight and support that comes in the Anonymous Fellowships .
21 ‘ He keeps them from seeing the light shining on them , the light that comes from the Good News about the glory of Christ ’ ( 2 Cor.
22 HAPPINESS is a conditioned reflex that comes from the right thoughts .
23 More importantly , this collection is about aspiring to a perfection of form , the inherent rush that comes from the simple juxtaposition of notes .
24 For example , a fifth of all adult casualties are at or near pedestrian crossings , whilst the disproportionate danger to children that comes from the residential street environment has already been discussed .
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