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

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1 New York has always been the place to come for a good show trial .
2 First and foremost erm there is an assessment of those officers by their immediate supervisors and er a then ensues whereby er suitable officers are s selected to come for a two day assessment at er police headquarters .
3 If I could just add my thanks to the officers substantial piece of work , which is , I hope going to be used by many members to come for the next year .
4 If you have not been able to come to Q.T. Days for a while , please try to come during the new session .
5 In the upheaval that was to come during the next 12 months , only the ECSC seemed to have avoided the scrapheap .
6 Ironically the amount eventually charged is still likely to come as a nasty shock for a client who has not yet confronted the financial realities of litigation .
7 If the candidate replies that she/he helped run a youth club in the town where she/he lived before you can be reasonably sure that a large number of young people is not going to come as a strange new experience .
8 In days to come as a staid married man and paterfamilias I shall remember my darling Lily with affection … .
9 They wanted it to come as a sudden surprise — jolt .
10 To enter the Kingdom of Heaven one has to come as a little child , with an attitude of trust , and prepared to be teachable and flexible ( Matt.
11 This was a test of how fast the regiment could pack up and move out to its battle positions , and was supposed to come as a big surprise , but Maxim knew how easy it was to predict .
12 ‘ I know this is going to come as a grave disappointment , ’ she said icily , ‘ but there 's no man waiting for me in Milan . ’
13 The BDA 's involvement in Europe is from a historical point of view likely to be seen in years to come as the finest achievement of the last few years .
14 To come between the two .
15 Carwyn desperately wanted to come through a few heats of the Pipeline Masters .
16 As a QANTAS flight was due to come through the following day , they hoped that Koepang W/T would be on the air before their arrival at Timor .
17 On the morning of 8 May , Ciparis had been waiting as usual for his breakfast to be brought to him , when it suddenly grew dark , and immediately afterwards , hot air laden with ashes began to come through the grating over the door .
18 Mark Breland took less than four rounds to come through the third defence of his WBC welterweight title yesterday in Tokyo , opening up a bad cut above the right eye of his Japanese challenger , Fujio Ozaki .
19 In that respect it seems to me that it is not something that is necessary to come through the full procedure of the council in order for you to do and I I thought that would would deal er establish .
20 If there is an approach for the Timex workers to come through the proper channels , I will recommend on behalf of the Executive for the Standing Orders Committee that we hear a Timex worker before the end of the Conference .
21 ( b ) The equal balancing of the two melodic lines in this case , and , at the same time , making them sufficiently powerful to come through the orchestral tutti , presents little difficulty if the simple principles of doubling are well understood and applied .
22 Those 35 were good enough to come through the pre-qualifying system .
23 Well we ha went round wo we had to come off the bloody dance floor !
24 Or perhaps she had sense to realise that in an entrenched battle she was likely to come off the worst .
25 Divorces rose steadily , though the real acceleration in the divorce rate was to come after the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act of 1 984 which allowed petitioning for divorce after only one year of marriage .
26 There may well be all sorts of contributory factors which need stating but these ought to come after the full apology .
27 The son of Caerleon is a progressive type , apparently certain to come of a few pounds for that introduction , and should be good enough to take the Queen 's Own Yorkshire Dragoons Stakes .
28 By the law of primitive socialist accumulation we mean the entire sum of conscious and semi-spontaneous tendencies in the state economy which are directed towards the expansion and consolidation of the collective organisation of labour in Soviet economy and which are dictated to the Soviet state on the basis of necessity : ( 1 ) the determination of proportions in the distribution of productive forces , formed on the basis of struggle against the law of value inside and outside the country and having as their objective task the achievement of the optimum expanded socialist reproduction in the given conditions and of the maximum defensive capacity of the whole system in conflict with capitalist commodity production ; ( 2 ) the determination of the proportions of accumulation of material resources for expanded reproduction , especially at the expense of private economy , in so far as the determined amounts of the accumulation are dictated compulsorily to the Soviet state under threat of economic disproportion , growth of private capital , weakening of the bond between the state economy and peasant production , derangement in years to come of the necessary proportions of expanded socialist reproduction and weakening of the whole system in its conflict with capitalist commodity production inside and outside the country .
29 between a lot of parked cars and there was a , I was coming down the road and all I needed to do was to actually stop where I was cos there was enough room on his side of the road for him to come past the parked car and round me
30 She did n't want to come against the flat slack flesh .
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