Example sentences of "come [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps come for the first time .
2 so just one Central South team in the cup now … and that 's Gloucester who come into the third round … for a tough old game on Tyneside … that 's in three weeks time
3 As part of the open market , blanket legislation comes into effect across the EC , although the changes mainly apply to the large manufacturers , which come under the first tier of the three-tier approval system .
4 Many of the people who come under the first proposal would be paying back loans for educational purposes .
5 Companies such as Caterham come under the second tier and have to comply with national approval rules based on EC legislation .
6 YOU COME WITH A FIRST CLASS PEDIGREE
7 All Safrane models offered in the UK come with the second generation Bosch 4-channel ABS braking system fitted as standard with ventilated front and solid rear discs .
8 ( The other votes come from the first class counties . )
9 The little border town of Ludlow may well be a twelfth-century example of planning on a smaller and more rudimentary scale , but the most notable examples come from the thirteenth century — Salisbury , New Winchelsea , the five bastide towns laid out by Edward I in North Wales , and part of Kingston-upon-Hull , laid out by Edward from 1293 onwards .
10 Most numerous surviving examples come from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries .
11 The Perks come from the third planet of a G class system in the region of Betelgeuse , where they live in warrens , underground , which is perhaps why they took so readily to the tunnels of Plenty .
12 I mean , cotton and things like this come from the Third World , does n't it .
13 If we win without it , we come in the first five that 's all well and good .
14 Thanks er , did the provision for er , properties like Penguin and four and a half million for the year , did all of that come in the second half , because it 's noticeable that Penguin is ahead something like what , thirty two percent , second half on second half .
15 ‘ Yes , sometimes you create this illusion for yourself , because you 've been with it a certain number of hours , but it can also go the other way : you might think something 's horrible and then come in the next day and realise it 's actually pretty good .
16 Yeah , they would , let the bake it we used to Danish foods and cos we used to have a Danish er , we used to have erm Polish ship come in one week and an English ship come in the next week and the , the bacon was just pigs were all killed , wrapped in sacking and tied with string , and they used to be laid in the hold like that .
17 The sweat was running down your back all day and I 've seen me taken off my white clothes and hang them up and they were still wet when you come in the next day .
18 Come in the next door .
19 Girls usually leave Arbour after twelve months , having taken their exams and any girls who , for instance , come in the third year at school are required to return to school afterwards .
20 The overwhelming majority of bush and shrub roses come within the second category , that is , they are pruned towards the end of the dormancy period .
21 The factors which come within the first category are those which must exist independently of the substance to be decided .
22 It really does come down to , I do n't know , I mean , every year we play it very honestly and very straight , and we push him in a position where next year , if there is a next year , I think the last time that we played it straight we got clobbered , so let's pay a little bit less , and keep a bit back for when they come round a second time round .
23 We now come to a second way in which inductivism is undermined .
24 After the victory at the sea the triumph song , but hardly have the last notes escaped Israel 's lips than we come to the second story of complaint ( 15.22–7 ) .
25 So we come to the second implication , which is that the student has to understand the practical aspects of the life of reason .
26 This is where we come to the second major theme of this chapter , ‘ arms races ’ .
27 If you want further information simply come to the second floor Committee Office between 11am and 4pm , Monday to Friday .
28 So we come to the second point .
29 At this stage we do not know whether the " dayes ' are general ( which would imply that the missing verb is are ) or particular ; but we get a clearer picture when we come to the second clause " when I / Shin " d " .
30 We now come to the second part of our programme , according to our agenda , which has the broad heading , Achiev N C V O Achievements and Intentions , and it 's obviously a natural follow-on from the I er , A G M which we have just completed , at which council received the annual report of N C V O's work for the past year , and its use of the resources which are available to it to carry out that work .
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