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

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1 " Clever of you to come on the right night , " he said .
2 However , if the department or faculty you are interested in is not listed , or it is impossible for you to come on the given dates , then we will do our best to arrange an individual visit for you provided you give us plenty of advance notice .
3 You came at the right time to save me and Hawkins . ’
4 ‘ You want gracious elegance , you came to the right place . ’
5 There was a wee window you could look into before you came to the back door and she was always sitting reading the paper .
6 It was a lesson on how to conduct yourself in huge menacing Dublin traffic if you came from a small place like Knockglen .
7 If you came from a poor family the only way you could get secondary education was by gaining a scholarship .
8 All I needed was 10 pence — which was what you had to pay in those days if you said you came from the previous stop — but I did n't even have that .
9 ‘ That means you came from the same egg .
10 Downstairs if you came in the front door ( which people rarely did ) you would find a large room on each side .
11 ( ‘ Why did you come to the New World ? ’ one conquistador was once asked .
12 Did you come to the last history meeting
13 Could you come for a few hours each day , do you think ? ’
14 Do you come from a big family ? ’
15 ‘ Do you come from a large family , Maura ? ’
16 Did you come from a musical family ?
17 You come down a steep hill from .
18 Redolent of exotic fruit and scented soap , it is almost sweet-and-sour in character — seemingly sweet at the rich bouquet stage , but satisfyingly dry — almost sour — as you come through the pungent taste .
19 So now can you see how politically , there is a kind of political subtext to this section erm as I say you can only follow it so far down a road then you come to a dead end but I think it 's there and you ca n't really ignore it , the political subtext .
20 ‘ Go across the drawbridge and you come to a heavy door
21 Upstairs , walk past the monks ' cells , until you come to a massive door .
22 When you come to the small group session this week , you 'll need to bring with you your video tape .
23 Wander through the village and along the lakeside promenade , and you come to the small Schafbergbahn railway , which winds its way to the top of the Schafberg mountain behind the village .
24 This is the same as the main route until you come to the Great Moss area , but where you cross over the River Esk , continue to follow the river to its source at Esk Hause , where you rejoin the main route .
25 Next you come to the dark ride where history takes on a life of its own and light , movement and sound come together to give you a realistic living picture of the town and its history .
26 Next , you come to the Philosophical Library , evidently later in date ( 1782–4 ) .
27 , but then , when you come to the lunatic fringe then supervisor 's will cut an awful lot of corners to prevent them busting up the office or punching somebody in the nose , a real , I do n't mean people who are just stroppy , I mean the real lunatic .
28 When you come to the main track turn right towards Nenthead .
29 You know , very often when you go from one country to another you go through an area of re , what is called no man 's land , you come through from one frontier and then you 've got a distance and you come to the next frontier that does n't exist as far as accepting or rejecting Christ is concerned .
30 If you go out of the W door and immediately right you come to the fine cloister of St James .
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