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

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1 Of the new ‘ Nepmen ’ , two were Jews who had come in from some other guberniia , and the other three all had military experience but little capital in goods or cash .
2 Gail , who is also looking forward to the birth of her first baby in November , said : ‘ We have just come back from two wet weeks in Bournemouth and said we could do with spoiling ourselves with a stay in a luxury hotel then I was told I had won — it 's amazing. , ’
3 When at last they lay quietly , her head resting on Luke 's shoulder , her hand spread against the damp warmth of his skin , Fran felt as though she had come back from some great journey that had shifted her conception and understanding of everything .
4 ‘ This one 's waiting for a guy to come back from some big-shit business deal .
5 The bombers came in from two different sides of the harbour and from the direction and .
6 The challenge to Swahili came less from local African languages than from English .
7 The most effective ideological influences came not from evangelical social reform but from more complex processes by which elements similar to those of the ruling ideology were produced from deeply felt experiences of the class itself .
8 Simon Keys came over from his job with the National Rivers Authority in Leeds and Julie Kent , working with the Industrial Ecology Research Centre at Liverpool University came over from this busy consultancy .
9 They 'll never come back from that 7-1 slaughter at Blackburn — at least , not as champions .
10 Students at … university , especially the top universities , come overwhelmingly from privileged urban backgrounds ’ ( Hooper 1985 : 55 ) .
11 Will the Chancellor bear it in mind that Labour is determined that justice shall be done for our retired people , despite all the smears , accusations and Government lies which come daily from Tory central office ?
12 In the country , they come largely from rural small holders and farm labourers .
13 So please come away from that particular avenue .
14 The sense of timelessness in Glass 's music comes directly from this characteristic structure .
15 The day his lover finally comes home from that other city .
16 The critical inability to see them comes partly from mere ideological reluctance ; partly , though , from unfamiliarity with the basic structural mode of The Lord of the Rings , the ancient and pre-novelistic device of entrelacement .
17 The cause of this apprehension comes mainly from two linked provisions which , if the sceptics are right , will reinforce each other .
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