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

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1 Maria replied that she was to be allowed to come for two days in the week following her letter .
2 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 .
3 It is important we know how many want to come for each event , so PLEASE CONTACT Val Hawkins ( 453-3366 ) or David Cameron ( 445 1154 ) or sign the list to be circulated , as soon as possible .
4 Most choose to come for two-week periods , with time to practise at home in between .
5 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 " .
6 The vision of God 's strength at Mahanaim would seem to come as timely reassurance of his protection in the dangers to come .
7 But as he says , our planet has managed to come through worse cataclysms than any we have so far invented , and there are always winners .
8 The shaft needed to come through two bearings to give it that stability .
9 Talk about your feelings with them and that will help you decide if you 're going to need some professional help to come through this experience which is very common and in which you can be helped , no matter what you may feel at the time .
10 What we 're interested in is how Dick ( Best ) can blend in those new players who will start to come through this year ’ .
11 ‘ Surely she does n't have to come through this lot to go to her flat ? ’
12 But benefits from a new nationwide distribution deal should start to come through next year .
13 I 'm sure it 's going to come off one day .
14 The galaxies may continue to recede from each other but , under the influence of the Universe 's own gravity , begin to slow down and then start to come towards each other again — in exactly the same way , and for exactly the same reason , that a ball thrown into the air will slow and then return to the ground .
15 Quite clearly the reason that people have been asked to come along this evening and have come along this evening is to put there points of view about how the see the theatre in the future what is programme facilities are the things that are n't happening here they feel should be happening here that 's what it 's for not here to serve any purpose for individuals to get up and make personal cuts on people or say what happen on a Saturday morning or a Thursday afternoon cos I
16 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 .
17 Fancy designer labels tend to come with fancy price tags to match .
18 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 .
19 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
20 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 .
21 ‘ You do n't want to come with old Nanny . ’
22 After the intensive twelve months support with the project , girls need somewhere to come with any problems that may occur later .
23 A tendency to editorialize seems to come with higher-lever Intelloids .
24 but which have to come with numerical evidence .
25 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 .
26 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 .
27 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 .
28 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 .
29 After all , just about everything ICI makes might by held to come under this umbrella title .
30 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 .
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