Example sentences of "[noun pl] come [adv prt] of [art] [noun] " 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 One after another , the big , black waves came out of the darkness — waves ten , twenty metres high !
3 Fans came out of the woodwork for those games .
4 On top of it there was a copper funnel , and there were rods coming out of the end of the funnel attached to a wheel .
5 The funnel described in this chapter makes the animals come out of the soil or leaves so that you can see what they look like and find out how many there are .
6 Even before disaffiliation the Communists had urged all ILP " militants " to " take the lead in calling upon all revolutionary elements to come out of the ILP in a body , hold a separate conference and decide whether and in what way they can link themselves up with the only revolutionary party in Britain today — the Communist Party " .
7 Water companies came out of the study well , with the ten privatised companies all on the top 24 profit-makers ' list .
8 Some Australians came out of the shower room and began arguing with the merry sub-human guard :
9 ‘ I love Harvey , ’ and little noises came out of the sphere of hair as if a canary was eating a hearty meal of seeds .
10 Just the kind of remarks one would hear as parents come out of the display of their children at annual ballet school spectacular .
11 Five minutes later , the man with sunglasses comes out of the house and goes to the black car in the road .
12 There 's still fleece on the outside , so once the drizzle or the rain starts , a waterproof needs to come out of the sack .
13 It was nearly midday when the worshippers came out of the Emmanuel Chapel after the prayer meeting .
14 Legal costs come out of the estate they 're not an executor 's personal responsibility , but on the other hand an executor is not entitled to charge for the work that he does .
15 The purpose of of these four orders , which I must say I greatly welcome , it is one of the , the most beneficial things to come out of the B C C I er disaster er and er i if I can say in in effectively in answer to everything the honourable gentleman for Great Grimsby said and he and I have debated on many occasions , if fact usually on the television not on the floor of the house , but er an an an an because of it for not quite so long either , er but erm th the point I would make to his is that really what he was saying was th that what went wrong with B C C I is that Price Waterhouse knew there was fraud and did n't say so and that wha what Lord Justice Bingham pointed out was that there is a clear conflict of interest between the interest of the client who they work for and the public interest and that what needed , what was needed was some amendment to the banking act to clarify that and that is precisely what er this order actually does and you ca n't really er Madam Deputy Speaker , expect anyone to really seriously criticise the government when in actual fact not only have they come up with the regulation to deal with that but they 've also gone further and said we will apply this to financial services and to building societies and to insurance companies as well , just to be absolutely sure .
16 Well that was of the interesting things to come out of the study , erm something which was totally unexpected as far as I was concerned , and that was it seemed that the pupils in the mixed ability classes developed more slowly socially than the pupils in the streamed classes .
17 Well that was one of the interesting things to come out of the study , something which was totally unexpected as far as I was concerned , and that was it seemed that the pupils in the mixed ability classes developed more slowly socially than the pupils in the streamed classes .
18 He noticed figures coming out of the barn , walking slowly and painfully to their homes .
19 One says the main problems are rival groups of casuals coming out of the discos and restaurants at about 4.30 , and the crowds that gather round the kebab shops .
20 THE catalogue of horror stories coming out of the banks ' treatment of their customers seems to have no effect on the high-handed , arrogant way they behave .
21 Had we used this three thousand three hundred figure as the annual migration , then the housing requirement figures come out of the projection rather then two thousand and six , would have been some ten thousand fewer .
22 If we saw two blokes coming out of a pub rolling drunk we might wait to see what develops before acting .
23 Seven minutes is what it takes me at this time in the evening ; eight , sometimes nine , coming the opposite way in the morning , to allow for waits at the two pedestrian crossings and the crowds coming out of the station .
24 Police and doctors came out of the building to help the passengers .
25 Dolores came out of the cottage with mugs of coffee for them .
26 All these creatures came out of the mud and
27 White flakes came out of the sky and Dad smiled , pointed and said , ‘ That 's snow ! ’
28 K. R. There were mainly annoying types of things — such as lads playing football in the street and that sort of thing , and the drunks coming out of the pub , and on the corner .
29 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 .
30 the sky was a beautiful blue , the sun in just the right position for the rainbows to come out of the cleft in exactly the right position photographically .
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