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 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 .
4 Her family history is equally dramatic and could almost have come straight out of the pages of a Barbara Cartland novel .
5 You know er it has to come really out of the Christmas Fair or Sir 's donations , something unallocated .
6 ‘ 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 .
7 A couple , arm-in-arm , came slowly up from the direction of the Underground .
8 She came slowly out of the fern bed .
9 For the next 10 years it basked in its monopoly , with radio still supreme , as TV came slowly out of the shadows .
10 the bump came right up through the table legs
11 Centuries before , according to Uncle Vernon , the water came right up into the town , and in rough weather people had to be carried ashore .
12 The lane from Bishopstow village came right up to the drive gates and ended there between stone gateposts crowned with lichened pineapples .
13 It was even more frightening than the chugging , and it came right up to the shelter door .
14 He came right up to the desk , towering over her , despite the solid barrier of wood .
15 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 .
16 ‘ It came right in through the window .
17 The feeling came right out of the blue , startling her , and she did n't answer , much to Alain 's amusement .
18 Ballymena soon settled after their indifferent start and they levelled matters on eight minutes with a goal which came right out of the blue .
19 Mrs Hughes said : ‘ I enjoy the work , but the award came right out of the blue . ’
20 The shintiyan were ordinary trousers , not undergarments , and came right down to the ankle .
21 Those going by sea of course came right down to the quay in in Porthmadog .
22 In my day we had long skirts , near came right down to the ground . ’
23 He came suddenly out of the blackness , looming large above them .
24 Lord Denning observed : ‘ In the OLA 1957 the word occupier is used [ as ] … a convenient word to denote a person who had a sufficient degree of control over premises to put him under a duty of care towards those who came lawfully on to the premises . ’
25 In the second half , Thame came more in to the game and created a couple of chances , however in the sixty fifth minute , Sean Liden won the ball on the halfway line , his long ball found Gary Weaving who turned and placed a low shot past Mayhew to make it one nil .
26 They encountered no difficulties en route , although they had to traverse one of the most dangerous ambush points in all South Scotland , at Pease Dean , where the Lammermuirs came directly down to the coast in steep wooded slopes cut up by deep ravines , and round which travellers had to wend their narrow , devious way .
27 Covered in dirt , Chris came quickly back into the car , showing no pride in his achievement , but giving Damon a glare of contempt .
28 The constable apparently left the chamber at that , for half a minute later a cloaked figure came quickly out of the Garden Tower 's entrance and disappeared into the darkness .
29 A remark which someone had once made to me about a man who had gone mad in the camp came clearly out of the darkness :
30 The music came clearly out of the room , and flowed round me and out through the colonnade into the light .
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