Example sentences of "[coord] come [adv prt] into [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Young people who have completed GCSEs at 16 can choose whether to stay on at school or college , or come out into the labour market and , possibly , take an entitlement to YT . |
2 | Then he could jolly well get on with things — and came out into the passage . |
3 | The bottom of it was very wide and came out into the moat . |
4 | He went into the college hall , and registered himself for matriculation among a rowdy assembly of students younger than himself ; and came out into the street to find that it had started to rain . |
5 | The men finished the house and came out into the street . |
6 | Garry answered it and came back into the kitchen with two policemen . |
7 | The old woman said something and Simon turned and came back into the room and stood by the deerskin pallet on which Hugh was lying . |
8 | The other people heard the noise of the shot and came back into the room . |
9 | Marcus put the thing down without doing any speaking and came back into the room . |
10 | As David caught sight of her he left the other two and came back into the foyer . |
11 | Loreto did try and come back into the game , but they relied on the breakaway too much with Barnwell and O'Neill always on their own , and lacking the support necessary to cause problems for Portadown . |
12 | What would I have done , I would have asked her to er get out of the bed , walk towards me and come out into the hall way where she could have been looked after by one of the other officers , and al allow me to get on with my main task in hand . |
13 | Cadfael went to meet him , and the porter , who had heard the stir of arrival and come out into the doorway of his lodge , halted on the threshold , and left it to Cadfael as an elder of the house to take charge of the returned prisoner . |
14 | I read once there 's over a hundred miles of rivers under the city , like the Fleet which rises in Hampstead and comes out into the Thames at Blackfriars , all underground . ’ |
15 | A spiritual movement of independence gathers force underground and comes out into the open , using doubt as its prime organ of propaganda . |
16 | A gently ascending forest track leads up through woods and comes out into the open at the summit of the trail , to give a fine view of the whole length of the Urner See , framed by the Fronalpstock ( 1,922m , 6,304ft ) and Rophaien ( 2,078m , 6,81 6ft ) peaks towering over the bluffs of the opposite ( east ) shore . |