Example sentences of "come from [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm not against the concept of co-opted members and I believe that they could add a useful dimension to any authority 's work , but apart from the obligatory brace of businessmen and I accept the Right Honourable and Noble Viscount Lord Whitelaw 's phrase and I quote powerful reference to a broad approach and new ideas and a fight against crime , but apart from the the brace er , er of such business people , they should surely come from representative sections of those communities which the authorities serve .
2 Further growth of the University will only come from additional investment from other , non-Governmental sources — investment that will be generated through the Campaign for Resource .
3 These may come from many sources ; from police , social work , other agencies , parents , or indeed from any private individual who may be concerned about a child .
4 Body panels may come from one part of Britain , engines from another , and electrical parts , tyres and glass from others .
5 At intervals the defenders would come from one part or another of the ramparts to collect a supply of them ; but for the moment the firing was slack .
6 Chainsaw guitars , bonecrusher drums , some bloke yammering on about serial killers … a sound that could only come from one place .
7 So for the BBC-designed Dalek the all-important inspiration could only really come from one source ; Raymond Cusick .
8 For James Stansfield , a prominent repealer , the critique of regulationism was founded on the belief that ‘ humanity is governed by a providential law which can only come from one source ’ .
9 The second example concerns the financing of the City Technology Colleges , and the government 's expectation that 80 per cent of this funding would come from private industry .
10 They supported the plan , but insisted that the money for implementing it must come from economic growth and cuts in spending on welfare and education .
11 Some of the opposition to liberalization may come from multinational companies used to low interest rates and to a protected local market .
12 Elaborating on this statement , he said that some of the increase would come from widening access , with more women , more older people and more people from ethnic minorities entering higher education , but he also anticipated a doubling of the participation rates among young people of the relevant age , from the present 15 per cent to 30 per cent .
13 This may be present in natural sources such as mine water but may also come from atmospheric pollution , from flocculation with alum , and from reuse of water .
14 One exceptional fossil site close to this age exists which provides far more detailed information about the bodies of animals than can come from mere shells .
15 In the coming year , some 30 per cent of Waterford sales in the U.S. will come from new products introduced in the past two years .
16 They will come from New Malden , Sutton and Epsom .
17 Even to meet this level of demand , some 25% of production in 1990 must come from new discoveries and a growing level of imports from Canada and Mexico will occur .
18 It is obviously highly desirable that middle-class youngsters and students drop out of smoking — even in this country , they do so in relatively high numbers — but that concentrates with an even stronger focus the efforts of the tobacco and advertising industries on youngsters who do not come from such categories .
19 The hours needed to carry out all these tasks can come from two sources .
20 At night , carriages containing prostitutes and their clients would come hurtling out of the park towards the entrance , and they could come from two directions .
21 Now , some of them will come from the Labour Party , and some of them will come from other associations not yet formed — I accept that as well — but I say this : in whatever shape these new forces manifest themselves , they will come from you , the despised students of humanity . ’
22 Just as often , however , it may come from other benefits , such as lower working capital or reduced energy consumption .
23 Strange to say , these trains do not come from other towns , say Birmingham , with er a trainload of stuff for Nottingham , they come with a trainload of stuff for here there and everywhere .
24 When parents relate to their children as if they were partners and look to them for the support and even sexual comfort that should come from other adults , the boundary surrounding and protecting childhood is broken .
25 Evidence for such qualities might come from other areas of youth culture .
26 A proper understanding of the role of intention in trusts must therefore come from other texts .
27 They believe vital information could come from other prostitutes who , like Carol , worked in Bristol 's red light area .
28 They seldom seem aware of the support that might come from other levels , and emphasize instead the difference of their problems and environment .
29 A return to profitability and , with it , BP 's traditionally high reputation will come from successful teamwork .
30 ‘ Much future growth will come from continued substitution of older materials in the automotive , domestic appliance and packaging sectors , ’ says Mash .
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