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

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1 Paul 's teaching must have come with all the more force to his original hearers .
2 The results are a bit like a small version of ‘ Trampled Underfoot ’ that has come from inside a Kinder egg .
3 AROUND 7000 PLANT-DERIVED MEDICINAL COMPOUNDS USED IN WESTERN MEDICINE COME FROM ONLY A SMALL NUMBER OF PLANT SPECIES …
4 Students of typography come from quite a wide range of backgrounds .
5 ‘ No , darling , but Mother and Lady Selvedge have come from quite a long way — miles , really — and those two young men talking to Ianthe are strangers , and I dare say Mr Stonebird will look in , ’ said Sophia comfortingly .
6 I think you 've come to really the wrong committee to try and get money .
7 ‘ Actually , you 've come at just the right moment .
8 The announcement about dinner being served , Henry observed with approval , had come at just the right length of time after the sherry had been drunk .
9 As I speak , a chance now for Martin Foyle ; Foyle has scored for Oxford , he 's done it , Oxford have pulled one back , tremendous through ball for Martin Foyle , he cheeked his way round the goalkeeper , put it in with the side of his foot so you 've come at exactly the right time , thirty one minutes gone , Spurs two , Oxford United one and the goal coming from Martin Foyle .
10 He cheeked his way round the goalkeeper , put it in with the side of his foot , so you 've come at exactly the right time , thirty one minutes gone , Spurs two , Oxford United one .
11 Well Christopher came in here the other day and he says that cake is
12 Cos a I I 've got the contracts right in the Body Shop , we got Karen she used to work in Superdrug , and she came in there the other day and I 'm saying , och , do you know Michelle ?
13 It seems likely that the masonry of the chimney 's lower section came from either a demolished house or another mill , as the quality of workmanship is of a higher standard than would have been strictly necessary .
14 The majority of his 49 international goals came from outside the 18-yard box , and they turned many a game .
15 The sound came from inside the golden orb of hair .
16 came from quite a wide area way up in the hills Airedale and all that area , at the foot of the Cleveland hills
17 He was born in seventeen sixty , in the middle of France , really , erm , and he came from quite a large family .
18 It was the best lesson I 've ever had , and it came at just the right time . ’
19 He never came to a conclusion for Angelina and Oliver came at just the wrong moment , just as the fish required the hand of the maître .
20 It was very difficult to concentrate on football , and then my injuries came at completely the wrong time .
21 Having coached Waikato in the New Zealand provincial championship for some years , Ross was looking for a new challenge and the opportunity to come to Northampton came at exactly the right moment .
22 For the past 15 years , according to Nicholson , HEIs have been increasing the proportion of their research money coming from outside the dual support system .
23 They are usually fitted into a timber sub-frame ( hardwood , in preference to softwood ; there 's little point in fitting an indestructible door in a frame that could rot in 10 years ) , and come with either a silvery finish or a factory-applied coating in a limited range of colours .
24 Some women who come from exactly the same culture with the same intent go through absolute hell .
25 Once you have dace feeding , you usually find that bites come from mainly a short section of the swim .
26 I come from quite a large family but most of my family live in the same area .
27 and and when er erm come over here the last time er , I I told him a a that he say , Doctor , you see , told what he said , he is a clever old boy were n't he ?
28 As though reading my thoughts she gave a series of contented grunts and the old feeling began to bubble in me , the deep sense of fulfilment and satisfaction that comes from even the smallest triumph and makes our lives worth while .
29 To the extent that a scientific speciality or discipline is bound together by the rules of an existing ‘ paradigm ’ defining the rules for ‘ puzzle-solving ’ with an existing ‘ normal science ’ , it has been argued that major scientific change often comes from outside the existing specialist group — not untypically through the ‘ migration ’ into the group of innovative outsiders .
30 Another cause comes from quite a different quarter .
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