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

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1 The valleys will have nobody working at all , there 'll be no one paying insurances , no income tax , so where is the money going to come for future pensions for people right through the country .
2 Most choose to come for two-week periods , with time to practise at home in between .
3 But there was worse to come as retail prices continued to rise and real wages to fall and as some shipowners , taking advantage of the union 's declaration of industrial truce , resisted increases in earnings and " fought the union tooth and nail for every penny " .
4 The vision of God 's strength at Mahanaim would seem to come as timely reassurance of his protection in the dangers to come .
5 On the other hand , professional advisers ( including lawyers ) tend to lay emphasis upon the skill and expertise which are supposed to come with professional status and training .
6 Fancy designer labels tend to come with fancy price tags to match .
7 Some have right-wing parties like Germany 's Republicans that stir racial hatred and exploit the tensions that tend to come with large-scale immigration .
8 The government has already invested large sums of money in engineering crops that resist insect pests and the climatic extremes expected to come with global warming
9 The house in Broad Street was to be inundated in the years to come with hopeful contributions from naval captains , clergymen , convicts , sheep-farmers , and soldiers , as well as Gould 's own specially appointed collectors .
10 ‘ You do n't want to come with old Nanny . ’
11 A tendency to editorialize seems to come with higher-lever Intelloids .
12 but which have to come with numerical evidence .
13 Under the new hygiene regulations fryers are likely to come under close scrutiny because traditionally the job of cleaning them is one of the worst in the kitchen .
14 There is unlikely to be any advance in the accuracy of dating of early Anglo-Saxon archaeology in the near future whereas the assumptions upon which such dates are allowed are very likely to come under close scrutiny .
15 He concluded that Thorp was likely to be the first of British Nuclear Fuel 's ( BNFL ) projects to be closed if the company was to come under financial pressure .
16 Analysts expect the pound to come under renewed pressure in the run-up to Thursday 's Bundesbank meeting , which will decide whether and by how much to raise West Germany 's key Lombard interest rate .
17 While the Danzig Poles were not keen for the city to come under Polish rule , they were nevertheless determined that they should not be penalised for being Polish , and in their own way they were proud of their identity — even if it did not quite amount to ‘ nationality ’ in a conventional sense .
18 The Frenchmen were keen to join up , but the snag was persuading the French authorities in the Middle East to permit them to come under British command .
19 Research on methods for controlling pests without chemicals is going on all over the world and the latest greenfly predator to come under scientific scrutiny is the lacewing .
20 The Autonomous Region of South Ossetia continued to come under heavy attack from Georgian forces sited outside its capital , Tskhinvali , which was cut off from aid ; there were reports of hostage-taking .
21 For this reason , and at a time of less genial moods , the Report was to come under severe criticism .
22 Nuclear power will help to save oil — the most vital of the USSR 's energy resources , yet a great deal more will need to be done to change Soviet energy structures if domestic oil supplies and supplies to other Communist countries are not to come under extreme pressure in the late 1980s and 1990s. there will still have to be a reduction in supplies to the Communist bloc and a considerable reduction in the proportion of Soviet energy demand which is met by oil .
23 The Bengali intelligentsia , the first sizeable social group in Asia to come into close contact with a European nation , were also the first to experience such a revolution in their mental world .
24 Where there is only one in-situ anchor , or else you are making your own anchor points , the first person down should have back-up protection , clipped independently into the abseil ropes , and adjusted so as to come into immediate effect if the main anchor fails , but without directly supporting it .
25 By that time Sheila Rowbotham was beginning to come into peripheral contact with the magazine .
26 Firstly , to brief top management on the possibilities of AI ; although not likely to come into direct contact with AI they would be first to see the likely improvements in effectiveness and efficiency .
27 The result is that , by and large , the fiscal has to take the case as the police have presented it ; he does not seize the opportunity to come into direct contact with the investigation and has little chance of finding out what the police have ignored .
28 We know that the projected new Ilyushin Y-type fighter aircraft is n't due to come into full-scale production much before the early 1980S … perhaps two more years before they are in full service with trained pilots and maintenance crews .
29 Have to has to come into common use before it gets into the dictionary .
30 ( ANNE ) Still to come in Central News , back to the Lebanon .
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