Example sentences of "comes [prep] this [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The Jamaican-born winger is six weeks ahead of schedule and if he comes through this test against a Tranmere side , he will be on target for an appearance in the Premier League match at QPR on November 23 .
2 Only physically though , a wiry vigour comes through this surface deception .
3 But if anything comes of this table tennis and Scottish country dancing that 'll be
4 Davidson 's fruit book comes into this category .
5 Another of my friends — the only one who comes into this category — is as plump as I am , and when we go out together we eat as much as we want , whenever we want .
6 Some scientists make a deep impression on their discipline and John Pople , a quantum chemist , comes into this category .
7 Legislation giving powers , and even sometimes duties , to local government comes into this category .
8 Cocaine usually comes into this country in the form of cocaine hydrochloride .
9 When an owner of property against whom an order has been made under the Act comes into this court and complains that there has been some irregularity in the proceedings , and that he is not liable to have his property taken away , it is right , I think , that his case should be entertained sympathetically and that a statute under which he is being deprived of his rights to property should be construed strictly against the local authority and favourably towards the interest of the applicant , in as much as he for the benefit of the community is undoubtedly suffering a substantial loss , which in my view must not be inflicted upon him unless it is quite clear that Parliament has intended that it shall .
10 I think that 's a good point actually and that maybe target setting is sort of a training that we ought to do with all staff , I mean and I do n't know how much of that comes into this magic three hours .
11 When man comes into this cycle , he brings with him the possibility of radical changes which can completely upset the natural balance .
12 Every city-born Yorkshire tyke comes into this world with an inborn , umbilical attachment to the Dales , those lush valleys below the brooding moorland where the Yorkshire rivers flow down to the Humber : Wharfedale , Swaledale , Airedale , Nidderdale , and Wensleydale , the only one not named alter its river , the Ure .
13 But how do you decide in advance exactly what comes under this head ?
14 However most of the work that comes under this heading is a good deal less ambitious in its claims ; it also approaches literary texts through their linguistic form , but on the whole does not pretend to define the essential properties of literature in purely linguistic terms , making greater allowance for other factors such as the role of the reader .
15 A person disqualified by reason of age , i.e. being too young to drive the particular class of vehicle , comes under this offence and age can be proved by a birth certificate or a statement from a person present at the birth in difficult cases .
16 Their remuneration comes from this position and takes the form of profits or high salaries and bonuses tied to profitability , so that their financial reward is linked very closely to the success of the firm .
17 The idea of ‘ scapegoat ’ comes from this passage ( Leviticus 16.20 following ) .
18 ‘ The Middlesbrough football player Bernie Slaven 's family comes from this part of Donegal as well . ’
19 Much of my great skill with dishes comes from this machine .
20 The following critical passage comes from this piece , first published in the Fortnightly Review in 1869 , and then in 1873 in Pater 's book , Studies in the History of the Renaissance .
21 One of the epic stories in the history of the SAS comes from this period of raiding the coastal railway .
22 Over 10% of the country 's GNP , and over 60% of its foreign exchange comes from this source — mainly now from workers in the Middle East .
23 The only formal evidence of continuity comes from this area in the shape of grants of an annuity to Thomas Hoton of Hutton John by both Warwick and Gloucester .
24 The only formal evidence of continuity comes from this area in the shape of grants of an annuity to Thomas Hoton of Hutton John by both Warwick and Gloucester .
25 ‘ I suppose it 's because he comes from this area — his home is here .
26 From what he tells me I think he comes within this definition , as he says you were never naturalised as an American .
27 I 'm totally institutionalised and no doubt erm you 'll see the truth of that if and when , if and when the Jocklyn report comes before this house .
28 The entry of Joanna , who came in to consult her about the drugs needed to replenish their stock , put an end to her melancholy reflections , and after they had decided Joanna said , ‘ When Ian comes round this evening I thought I 'd give him coffee or a drink in our sitting-room .
29 I , I was just going to say that the county surveyor said that everything comes to this committee before anything else happens , but of course it goes to the press before it comes to this committee and that shows with , with the
30 I , I was just going to say that the county surveyor said that everything comes to this committee before anything else happens , but of course it goes to the press before it comes to this committee and that shows with , with the
  Next page