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

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1 I did the er there was a an ambulance came down the road in front of a bus you see , and a chap which was on the cor , side the road and he he went like this so I stopped and the ambulance came round and turned into this building site and I and while we were sitting there bang !
2 We just saw Eddie 's tiny figure coming through the entrance in an open Land Rover before we collapsed in hysterical relief .
3 The light coming from the clock in front of her .
4 The ceremony began , and soon I heard the priest come to the point in the wedding where he had to ask , ‘ Is there any reason why these two people should not be married ? ’
5 His softer , more nostalgic side comes to the fore in songs like ‘ The Actor ’ and Casablanca ’ .
6 The appeal for a day of prayer for peace came as the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina grows worse and threatens to spread into other areas of the Balkans and beyond .
7 A growing athleticism and professionalism came into the game in Australia .
8 The group came to the market in 1980 .
9 Soon the only sound came from the carousing in the hall below .
10 His first taste of Test captaincy came at the Oval in 1988 ; he was unable to stem the West Indian flood , but produced a battling second innings to make a game of it .
11 OVERCOMING rural isolation through teleworking came under the spotlight in Stanhope .
12 Most of the day-to-day trade came from the man in the street , and it would be wrong to infer that every coffin-maker and funeral furnisher hungered after catering for the top end of the market .
13 The single small pellet collection came from the desert in Qatar ( Table 2.3 ) , and the analysis of bones from this desert variety shows remarkable similarity to the bone assemblage from Sweden despite the great difference in species composition and diversity of the prey .
14 New opportunities for sub-regional planning came with the establishment in 1974 of Area Health Authorities ( AHAs ) ‘ with full planning and operational responsibilities … responsible for the provision of comprehensive health services … ’ to a defined population ( DHSS , 1972 ) .
15 Yet he has seen only two other houses in the creek come on the market in the last 12 years .
16 The theatre was originally a Salvation Army citadel , built when the Sally Army came to the town in 1888 .
17 Apparent success came with the announcement in April 1985 of a three quarter million pound investment programme to resignal the line .
18 Telegraph came to the village in 1901 and messages were sent by morse code .
19 If the Minister can give us any example from the privatisation programme , in which the Government have been engaged since 1979 , of a Secretary of State coming to the House in order to bring in check private owners who have subsequently done away with the right of the employees of former public companies , I should be extremely interested to hear about it .
20 I say a tall man coming across the street in shirt-sleeves .
21 The word comes from the Latin in cubo ( to lie heavily upon ) , which probably referred to the powerful nightmare which would assault the victims after seduction .
22 We are therefore presented with a book which was not ‘ written in order … but like as the matter came to the creature in mind … for it was so long ere it was written that she had forgotten the time and the order when things befell ’ .
23 This is where the specialist credit insurance broker comes to the fore in negotiating a structure and pricing which is in keeping with the client 's business .
24 In the period following the Great Fire of London in 1666 several companies were floated , but the real expansion came with the increase in urbanisation of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries .
25 The emergence of the satire movement in the early sixties ‘ marked a new stage in the social revolution ’ : ‘ Like the pop artists ( and the pop singers yet to come ) the satirists formed part of a new generation coming to the surface in English life , one young enough to have been moulded by the garish , anarchic and youth-conscious atmosphere of the late fifties … . ’
26 When planning a rotation , it is very helpful to draw up a long-term scheme and dovetail the various crops into the seasons , at the same time ensuring that each field comes into the rotation in its turn and is then put back in grass to build up fertility for the requisite period .
27 [ … ] It is perhaps no coincidence that only when one is prepared to recognize that the firm is based on authority do issues of power come to the fore in the theory of the firm .
28 The impetus came with the appearance in the market towns of the ‘ Continuous Jetty ’ house , an intermediate stage of development .
29 ‘ With the exception of a few broken computers sliding off desks , and other such minor damage , the plant came through the quake in good condition .
30 Even in the " Court–Country' Election of 1698 the partisan rivalries of Church politics came to the fore in some areas .
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