Example sentences of "[vb base] come to the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You 've come to the right place , then , ‘ she said cheerfully , leading the way inside .
2 ‘ We 've come to the best club in the country and won .
3 ‘ We 've come to the best club in the country and won .
4 You 've come to the wrong committee to try and get like a cash handout , but er we do appreciate the problems of putting on entertainments , and bops on campus .
5 ‘ Aye , well , lass , if you 're after wor Robbie you 've come to the wrong shop .
6 I could say that you 've come to the wrong place , but I wo n't . ’
7 We may forever want confidence that we have come to the ultimate facts about some physical process .
8 Forced to examine the situation anew , I have come to the following conclusions :
9 Even if you are only seeing a few people there should be someone to greet them on arrival and make them feel they have come to the right place on the right day .
10 ‘ I have come to the right place , have I ?
11 Travelling by no track , I have come to the sorrowless land .
12 We have come to the clear conclusion that Parliament , in adopting the phrase ‘ office or employment , ’ intended section 16(1) of the Act of 1968 to have a wider impact than one confined to the narrow limits of a contract of service .
13 In the last section we have come to the interesting conclusion that B may alone exist of all our variables but we reached that conclusion on a magnet shape not much used in practice .
14 I have come to the same conclusion as many people who find that they have a potentially fatal disease .
15 But , as stated in Anderson v. The Queen , at p. 108 , per Lord Guest ‘ in cases of murder great care must be taken to see that there has been no miscarriage of justice ’ and the test , a strict one , has been described in Woolmington v. Director of Public Prosecutions [ 1935 ] A.C. 462 , 482–483 , per Viscount Sankey L.C. as whether ‘ if the jury had been properly directed they would have inevitably have come to the same conclusion ’ and in Stirland v. Director of Public Prosecutions [ 1944 ] A.C. 315 , 312 , per Viscount Simon L.C. , as involving ‘ a situation where a reasonable jury , after being properly directed , would , on the evidence properly admissible , without doubt convict . ’
16 I have come to the same conclusion that some a method of appointment is in fact right and it makes sense .
17 ‘ I 'm afraid you really have come to the wrong man .
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