Example sentences of "come [adv] into [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Colour began to come back into the young woman 's cheeks . |
2 | Adam came up into a kneeling position and waited for the bus to start moving . |
3 | For a period of the late 16th century it appears to have come into the possession of the Earls of Leicester but eventually came back into the full possession of Trinity College , which remained lord of the manor until quite recent times . |
4 | I realized I was lost when the sky suddenly lightened and I came out into a broad clearing . |
5 | They came out into a wide waterway which ended in docks . |
6 | I came out into a strange city — hardly knew my way around . |
7 | Two great doors stood open in an arched entrance and they came out into a cobbled courtyard . |
8 | We came out into a lovely night : the effect of the quiet town , in the moonlight , with the snowclad hills behind is one that I sha n't soon forget , ’ wrote Warnie . |
9 | As Theda came out into the dark hall , she heard someone bustling down the stairs , and recognised Mrs Diggory 's voice . |
10 | It jolted up the lane , slowed down as it came out into the open area in front of the quarry gates , and stopped . |
11 | She came out into the starlit night , and beckoned one of the battered taxis to take her the short distance to the Monte Samana complex . |
12 | In Sutton , the wires came out into the High Street and ran a short distance to the right to run round a small green at Bushey Road . |
13 | ‘ But I came late into the first-class game , I 'm 28 now and I really want to be in the big time before I end my career . ’ |
14 | He subsequently came briefly into the national spotlight when , fighting Bexley for Labour in the 1966 General Election , he gained only 2,333 votes fewer than Conservative leader Edward Heath in a 54,826 poll . |
15 | Then she turned and walked towards the deep end , turned again and did a perfect back flip , hardly denting the surface and coming up into a smooth breaststroke only a few feet away from me . |
16 | Coming out into the main channel , we made a wide U-turn and headed upriver . |
17 | The tap-room of the tiny inn was down a deep step and he nearly sprawled on the tiled floor , coming abruptly into the cool darkness . |
18 | Apart from Gatting , who is seen as a near-certainty for England 's winder tour of India , others who may come back into the international reckoning are Chris Broad , Alan Wells , Matthew Maynard and John Emburey , while Neil Foster ( another South African tourist ) might have been considered for the winter tour but for a knee injury which kept him out of the Essex side for the last part of the season . |
19 | but I said to him , I 'll go and buy vinyl and we can come back into the same position , and he ai n't no good at sticking vinyl up , I always go round with a bloody |
20 | Slowly come up into the final standing position . |
21 | You come out into the floating garden |
22 | But clearly the it forms two purposes , one is to remove the er the through traffic but also it it forms a purpose of redistribution of the traffic such that er there are er benefits er of getting er traffic off the A sixty one which for example is headed for the for the northern part of Harrogate and that that can come in from the South , it can go up to the A fifty nine and then come back into the northern part of Harrogate without having to pass through the centre of Harrogate . |
23 | So anyway she comes along into the dark pet and she said oh heck she said you must have a power cut along here I ca n't see nothing |