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

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1 But that policy has come in for sharp criticism from monetarists who insist that it has fed the rapid expansion of broad money supply , M4 , and inflamed inflationary pressures .
2 Superficially attractive and officially , if implicitly , condoned by UNESCO , this theory has come in for severe criticism from Western media interests and journalists .
3 However , the NRA has come in for some criticism for not taking action .
4 They had held back at Milfield on the Till , biding their time , until their scouts came in with exact information of the movement of the Scots army .
5 Kate Armstrong came in with another tray of coffee .
6 All the leaders came in for new rubber between laps 24 and 31 , when Patrese pitted .
7 While councillors came in for much criticism for being representative , health professionals had similar difficulties .
8 The Prime Minister came in for strong criticism from opposition leaders but insisted only single party government by Fianna Fail could work for Ireland .
9 The last , in particular , came in for detailed criticism in the 1960s and must , therefore , be considered a little further .
10 Irwin , too , came in for some criticism from his own side , notably from Churchill , who was famously appalled by the ‘ spectacle of this one-time Inner Temple lawyer , now seditious fakir , striding half-naked up the steps of the Viceroy 's palace , there to negotiate and parley on equal terms with the representative of the King-Emperor ’ , but generally he was showered with praise .
11 But Labour Party councillors also came in for some criticism from delegates .
12 The Liverpool fences came in for considerable criticism over their stiffness — unlike the Grand National ones from trainers , with several vowing never to return until they were modified .
13 Kravchenko came in for fierce criticism at the seventh congress of the USSR Journalists ' Union held on Feb. 5-7 , over the return of political censorship of state television , as witnessed recently in the withdrawal of the Vzglyad documentary series and the return by the flagship news programme Vremya to official propaganda and exhortation .
14 The decision was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Soviet Presidium on 20 November and the Baltic republics came in for severe criticism from other delegates at the Supreme Soviet session on 1 December which passed the constitutional amendments into law .
15 Erm I mean that was quite odd really , we had er quite a few white tenants coming in to one end of the building , erm just saying that , you know , We just ca n't cope with it any more .
16 What money did you have coming in at that time in fact ?
17 ‘ That was coming in from one side into It , but it was too moral for me — and it still is .
18 Badawi romped home in an Ascot ladies race last time and looks the best bet of the day in the opener at the Lancashire track , while Young Buster will come in for strong support in the Rose of Lancaster Stakes after his defeat of Twist And Turn at Doncaster .
19 The peasants in the Roslavl' region did come in for some attention during 1922 , though supervision was at best paternalistic , sporadic , and myopic .
20 It should rise above the personality cults that will come in with religious advertising on television .
21 Very soon , someone would come in with uncomplicated news of the day ; someone ordinary , a nuclear physicist or a brain surgeon .
22 It can only come in as some kind of ‘ emergent property ’ of all these causal interactions .
23 He , he come in about that quote for nine for remember Mr
24 ( See Hall v Marians 19 TC 582 , Wild v King Smith 24 TC 86 , IRC v Gordon 33 TC 226 cf Lord Radcliffe in Thompson v Moyse 39 TC 29 at 337 ; it is not felt that Harmel v Wright 49 TC 149 at 159 alters the position because if one is " keeping one 's eye " ( p157E ) on the income and benefit it does not find its way to the United Kingdom ( it is hardly the case that the income and benefit " come in at one end of a conduit pipe and pass through certain traceable pipes until they come out at the other end to the taxpayer ( in the United Kingdom " ) ) . )
25 Phrasal verbs come in for more attention with Phrasal Verbs Organiser from LTP ( by the man who gave us the First Certificate Organiser ) , while HarperCollins is publishing a Phrasal Verbs Workbook to accompany its dictionary .
26 What I might actually do it see if Ian 's not doing anything if he not come in for the full time that they 're cleaning up , but come in for those sort of things .
27 Besides China in second place , India comes in at fifth place in the league , and Mexico and Brazil are also both bigger than Canada , currently the G7 's seventh man .
28 Transfer-listed Thomas comes in at left back as Dicks starts a three-match match ban following his red card for elbowing Franz Carr at Newcastle last month .
29 The legacy of Descartes comes in for further scrutiny in Joanna Hodge 's paper , which examines the concept of ‘ the subject ’ which philosophy has inherited from Descartes .
30 , cos unless we 're going to get it straight , but it just all comes in like this time of year , and just comes and let us in .
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