Example sentences of "come [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | He did come on as a substitute against er Oxford in midweek and Frank Clarke 's first signing injured his shoulder in this collision with Speedy . |
2 | Jazz switched the television off and came outside with them and they kicked a tin-can round the field a bit and then sat on some dumped oil-drums and watched the lights come on along the front and smoked a cigarette and reflected on their fate . |
3 | But the upward pressure on prices will be dampened by the 70,000 repossessed properties and the large stock of inherited houses that will now come on to the market . |
4 | At halftime , he 'd come on to the pitch and give the whole team extra-strong mints , rearrange the tactics , change our positions , tell us we were playing downhill in the second half , tell us that a six-goal deficit was nothing . |
5 | The needle will come on to the scale from the Left on the indicator . |
6 | Not only would I lose a valued client but her collection might come on to the market , her reasons for selling would become known , Durances all over the world would become suspect and lose their value and dealers would suffer . |
7 | Mrs Blakey , only a little less sceptical than her husband of this line of talk , nevertheless recalled how Timothy Gedge had affected her when he 'd come on to the telephone with a woman 's voice , and her bewilderment when the silence had first begun in the house . |
8 | Okay let's come on to the , the report itself erm tt okay I 've forgotten who was |
9 | The gayer , shorter girls would come on for a general dance to the Gavotte . |
10 | And I 'm sure Miinnehoma will come on for the race , ’ he said . |
11 | It may make for some good headlines , but De Niro certainly does n't come on like a tycoon , talking about his company as not so much a business , more an ‘ artistic community ’ where people can freely exchange ideas . |
12 | His reappearance in 2010 decisively resolves this , at the cost of making him come on like a Californian religious freak about ‘ something wonderful ’ . |
13 | The only thing that makes it bearable is the irrational belief that somebody interesting will come on in a minute … |
14 | Dyspnoea ; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation , a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep , a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck ; neck is very sensitive to touch . |
15 | After all the years in which we pressed British Rail to open the station and the bus company to allow buses to come down into Portlethen village , when the station was reopened , the bus companies suddenly decided that buses would come down off the main road and start a service to compete with British Rail . |
16 | Did it really not come down to a fear of the knife ? |
17 | Perhaps an article on Sterlets , with pictures , might interest more people and with the increased interest perhaps in time the price will come down to a more realistic level . |
18 | Moreover , as Hirst has suggested , it is not by any means certain that more knowledge in itself would help ; disagreement among supposed experts suggests that in fact we are comparing differing practices , differing values , differing approaches , and that in the end we shall come down to a series of judgements in which personal preferences will play their part . |
19 | The theoretical difference between the categories may well come down to a question of the burden of proof , though in practice a party seeking to uphold the validity of the restrictive covenant — usually the employer — has to make all the running . |
20 | ‘ I 'll take Lady Lassiter home , men , and then I 'll come down to the buildings . |
21 | I guess he heard Barbara and me discussing the good time we had with you , and he kind of picked up on it , and he wondered why he could n't come down to the Bahamas and isolate himself from drugs . |
22 | ‘ I 've been hoping you 'd come down to the beach these last three days , ’ he went on . |
23 | Do n't come down to the kitchen . |
24 | It 'll come down to the same thing . ’ |
25 | In other words , the differences between the two may come down to the fact that one is a linguist interested in grammar , while the other is a psychologist interested in the functional relations between language and the immediate context . |
26 | The company is also predicting European prices will come down to the same level as in the US . |
27 | Er and then when the Second World War started er we , we had to leave there and come down to the er sh to the sh shop really . |
28 | Okay , if the seconder and additional speakers would come down to the front , please . |
29 | And again colleagues , it would assist , er , if movers and seconders and supporting speakers and speakers who 're speaking on behalf of the regions , if they could come down to the front . |
30 | Anybody else who 's coming up between twenty nine and thirty four , if you could come down to the rostrum colleagues . |