Example sentences of "[noun pl] come [adv] in the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Kids come up in the street and say , ‘ Hey Mista Rick , how ya doin' ? ’ |
2 | A small piece of warm , of hot wax applied to the area , it 's set , pulled off , and the all the hairs come away in the wax . |
3 | Most of the provisions of the Housing Act 1988 relating to private sector renting apply equally to housing associations , but the most important change relating to housing associations came not in the Act but by ministerial decision . |
4 | Shoes came off in the water . |
5 | ‘ And what if Barbs comes home in the middle of it ? ’ asked Camille . |
6 | The day before his father 's return , he had driven out to a lake some ten miles from the town ; it was deserted and half frozen , and he had walked round it , finding that the fresh air cleared his head and that ideas came fast in the silence of the woods . |
7 | Further , by comparing the size of the mushroom bodies to the brain as a whole it has been shown in the Hymenoptera that the sawflies come lowest in the scale and the social Hymenoptera highest , while the solitary bees occupy an intermediate position ( Hanstrom , 1926 ; Pandazis , 1930 ; Gejvall , 1936 ; Goossen , 1949 ; and earlier workers ; cf. also Zuberi , 2963 , on termites ) . |
8 | We discovered that a paella needed to be ordered at lunchtime for the evening , and went back to eat it while watching boats come back in the gathering gloom . |
9 | Two kingdoms come together in the place … nothing can keep them apart … black birds roosting in the turret … sing Come and play come and play some body up here want play with you … |
10 | A few lights came on in the villages . |
11 | Lights came on in the Mootwalk shops as one by one they began to open . |
12 | Suddenly , all the lights came on in the hospital and they eventually opened a side-door and let her in . |
13 | The Germans occupied them in the second world war , the Americans rebuilt them afterwards , and then the north-west Europeans came back in the shape of the European Community and its powerful money . |
14 | And there 'll be a few showers coming along in the afternoon and there 'll be plenty of sunshine about and it should feel reasonably pleasant with temperatures around nine Celsius , forty eight Fahrenheit . |
15 | It is worth noting , for instance , that all the new titles coming out in the United Kingdom in recent years have had substantial backing from a variety of sources : finance corporations , industrial interests , media interests , and so on . |
16 | When there was a sense of unrest and what not , and then first one ship then the other , starts shuddering but before that happened we saw Germans coming off in the rafts and that . |
17 | These regions come together in the precursor rRNA transcript to form long stem structures that serve as site for processing by RNase III ( 6 , 7 ) . |
18 | Prices came down in the street and as for having a purse snatched , well , such things did n't happen to army wives . |
19 | That raises the question of whether or not that gives him the sort of ‘ job security ’ necessary to experiment with the new players coming through in the hope of building a side capable of beating All Blacks , Wallabies and Springboks . |
20 | ‘ The Americans come on in the afternoon . ’ |
21 | A lot of his films were unpretentious junk , but they made money and Nicholson and others came along in the slipstream . |
22 | At the end of each summer , when the grass turned brown and the growing cycle had ended , groups of women came together in the fields for a ceremony of weeping . |
23 | It is a car town and it is a city of immigrants , white , brown and black : Scots and Irish have staffed its militant shop stewards ' movement , and the races came together in the city 's wondrous two-tone band , the Selector . |
24 | Most complaints come on in the evening or night and subside by midnight usually . |
25 | Although it was evacuated in 1586 , new settlers came later in the year , and were reinforced in 1587 . |
26 | The politicians coming along in the states decolonised in 1960 ‘ have benefited from the spadework done for them . |