Example sentences of "of [noun pl] come [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Only that Frank has seen him a number of times coming out of a special house down there .
2 Erm and we find in the office that we get lots of forms coming in from the Paymaster General asking us to confirm that mister X is employed you know on a on a part time basis .
3 On the short mixed ridge leading to this minor training summit , you can view an endless stream of parties coming up from the Grands Montets cablecar station for a taste of a real alpine mountaineering .
4 There are a lot of enthusiasts coming up with a lot of good ideas but the information never gets out .
5 Well I can remember when I went Was in the water at the start , there was You could see a lot of boats coming in alongside the platform .
6 One says the main problems are rival groups of casuals coming out of the discos and restaurants at about 4.30 , and the crowds that gather round the kebab shops .
7 The changes in legislation have been dramatic since the mid-eighties the majority of changes coming in at the beginning of nineteen ninety three with the E C directives .
8 So we 'll have groups of teams coming along for an hour at a time and hopefully we 'll , you know , keep the impetus going through the day by doing that .
9 There will thus be an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange market .
10 This will therefore lead to an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange markets .
11 The professor said that the plans , which will not involve incineration , followed the region 's appointment of consultants to come up with the best environmental option for the disposal of the region 's sewage sludge without excessive cost .
12 And to be really frank , one has to say when those kind of things come out in the open one has to say has the church got its priorities right ?
13 H. P. Some people would get a bottle of beer — we 'd had a lot of fellows come out of the army and they were fond of their drink and there 's no doubt that they could get it .
14 Their running was impeded by the mass of men coming out of the main doors and scattering in all directions , and heads down , they made their way between them to the back of the Naafi and into the rest room , which was empty ; and they were just in the process of taking off their wet top coats when the supervisor came in , saying , ‘ Oh , I 'm in luck ; I was about to send to the hut for help .
15 I have an army of women coming in from the village to do all that .
16 Another eyewitness said : ‘ I was in my office when I saw a lot of women coming out of a hairdresser 's with towels over their heads .
17 As transport costs rose and London 's reputation for violence after dark grew , business was increasingly dependent on coachloads of theatregoers coming in from the provinces .
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