Example sentences of "[noun pl] come [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 Sucralose is one of the few products to come out of the Reading research labs that T&L felt it had the resources to develop through to the market .
2 On the short mixed ridge leading to this minor training summit , you can view an endless stream of parties coming up from the Grands Montets cablecar station for a taste of a real alpine mountaineering .
3 And erm y every time the cleaners came round on a Tuesday it 's not ev er everything had to be on the bed , including chairs er everything , you know , you had to have your desk
4 It was nearly midday when the worshippers came out of the Emmanuel Chapel after the prayer meeting .
5 Having served with the Duke of Wellington 's Regiment in two campaigns on the north-west frontier of India , the Corporal was recalled briefly in 1938 , went to France in 1939 , and spent five days coming out over the Dunkirk beaches .
6 A strong south-westerly wind ruins the swells coming in off the Atlantic .
7 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 .
8 It may involve additional cost if you 're going to have the er chefs coming in for a Saturday .
9 One of the key lessons to come out of the General Motors-Toyota joint venture in California is that the Japanese automaker does not rely on automation and technology to replace workers in the plant .
10 One of the top ANC men came back from the Dar Es Salaam talks and told us , ‘ I am more than ever convinced that violence is not the way .
11 Every morning at about 8 am ducks come out of the Thames to sleep on the jetty .
12 I chose my family , and just waited for the big boys to come up to the Birkdale area .
13 Attempts to encourage otters to come back to the River Thames are being aided by the building of a man-made home for them .
14 PERESTROIKA and Glasnost have been the buzzwords coming out of the USSR ( or whatever it is now going to be called ) in recent years and the aviation world too , has been buzzing with exciting words like Fw 190 , Hampden , Hurricane , and Yak-1 .
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