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

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1 To see under the bridge , the mestizo would have to come right down into the water .
2 Well if you did n't there 'd be so much change on the bail that they all start to fall off and there 'd be all one big muddle cos that and as chain coming down that used to come right down into the chain locker to the bottom of the ships .
3 Will he please help her and others like her to come in out of the cold ?
4 An adult owl normally knows this and stays in shelter , but inexperienced hunters may not have the sense to come in out of the rain .
5 He would n't have enough sense of self-preservation to come in out of the rain .
6 It looks as if it has come straight out of a childrens ’ story book , for it is round with cosy little windows peeping out of the almost conical thatched roof .
7 Her family history is equally dramatic and could almost have come straight out of the pages of a Barbara Cartland novel .
8 One of the soldiers had come up on to the cabin top .
9 Almost before you can see what has come up out of the hold the fish is loaded on the barrow and trundled off at breakneck speed , followed by the small boys and the cats .
10 We can never be a hundred per cent sure with security , we are , it is a public building , we do encourage er patients and their relatives to come up on to the children 's wards as part of the treatment er to make it a much more homely atmosphere .
11 ‘ As the shier and more uncertain of the two brothers , his problem was n't to be wimpish but to be funny , and he knew immediately that the comedy had to come up out of the character , not just out of what he said .
12 ‘ Years ago we threw the old didacticism ( dowdy morality ) out of the window ; it has come back in at the door wearing modern dress ( smart values ) and we do not even recognize it ’ ( p. 159 ) .
13 You know er it has to come really out of the Christmas Fair or Sir 's donations , something unallocated .
14 In the less than half light Owen saw that Georgiades had come out on to the gallery .
15 Then , not even glancing at the room beyond , or at a woman who had come out on to the stairs , she led him away to a small room of perfect luxury at the back of the house , which was clearly her own .
16 Jilly Jonathan was sitting just as she had been ever since they had come out on to the terrace .
17 Then my granny had to come out on to the verandah and interfere .
18 Also pensioners , there 's now more of an incentive for them to come back on to the labour market .
19 , like to come back up onto the yard line .
20 It is commonplace for me to step outside the door in the morning intending to do one particular task , and then to come back in for a lunchtime bowl of soup having done three or four entirely different jobs of maintenance or repair .
21 ‘ I 'm afraid not , ’ he replied , and might have added more , but just then a car , a Skoda , driven by a man of about thirty , came slowly around to the rear of the house , and parked on a car standing area .
22 A couple , arm-in-arm , came slowly up from the direction of the Underground .
23 She came slowly out of the fern bed .
24 For the next 10 years it basked in its monopoly , with radio still supreme , as TV came slowly out of the shadows .
25 the bump came right up through the table legs
26 Centuries before , according to Uncle Vernon , the water came right up into the town , and in rough weather people had to be carried ashore .
27 The lane from Bishopstow village came right up to the drive gates and ended there between stone gateposts crowned with lichened pineapples .
28 It was even more frightening than the chugging , and it came right up to the shelter door .
29 He came right up to the desk , towering over her , despite the solid barrier of wood .
30 Before the construction of the Promenade here , in 1903 , the sands came right up to the tram track , as seen in this view of a Dreadnought approaching the terminus .
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