Example sentences of "come in from the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Reproaching herself for not having unlocked it when she had come in from the main door , she rose quickly and went to open up .
2 The ceremony was in the hands of Mr Alexander Dubcek , who came in from the political cold less than 24 hours before , to be elected head of the new-style Federal Assembly .
3 But nobody cared for the stones he told And he sat all alone of a night Until one day a traveller came in from the cold A sorry and miserable sight .
4 Grants came in from the Welsh Office , Welsh Tourist Board and the local authorities allowing the newly formed Brecon Mountain Railway Company to take on permanent staff for line construction and a stone-faced workshop ( in keeping with other buildings in the National Park ) built at Pontsticill .
5 A bright red Porsche came in from the wrong end , ignoring the arrows and signs .
6 But coming in from the shabby streets outside , which smell of coal and cement dust and Wartburg exhausts , the effect is of life and excitement .
7 He knew that Garvey 's eyes could see nothing , coming in from the relative lightness outdoors .
8 A restructuring is under way — John McIntyre , vice-president of European Operations has gone , and Europe is now being split into two : the UK , where Engels has recently been appointed managing director , and the continent , where Terry Hall is coming in from the Australian operation to take charge .
9 These are believed to result , at least in part , from sewage pollution , although there is some evidence that nutrients are also coming in from the open sea .
10 Sculpture comes in from the far reaches of the Pavillon de Flore at the Louvre
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