Example sentences of "come [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] [det] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He had come down to the Club that night with a real purpose , a purpose only half of which had been carried out at the meeting . |
2 | The queasiness which had first compelled him to come back to the house that evening clawed him again , and kept him in the chair under her fond glances and bids to intimacy . |
3 | A FURTHER tranche of fixed-rate mortgages came on to the market this week following last month 's cut in official base rates from 7 to 6 per cent . |
4 | When he came in for the night some hours later he was still agitated and fretting . |
5 | He came up to the house that evening , armed with the music box and the monkey . |
6 | We were in a shabby little hole in Paddington , and when we came back from the pub that night he went walking up and down that hotel room , sticking his chest out and saying , ‘ I 'm the sex queen of Bloomsbury . |
7 | Several colour strains have bee bred since the original black and silver variety came out on the market many moons ago . |
8 | The cost was less than the price of an Amstrad PCW 8256 when it first came out onto the market all of those years ago . |
9 | in the top flat , they , they were rehoused in a flat in a block of mansion flats and when I came out of the army this was the accommodation I found available , er for me and I objected strongly and after a great deal of fuss erm the Islington Borough Council 's Housing Department found us rooms on the first floor in a Victoria Victorian villa in Penventon Gardens , which erm , were comfortable |
10 | And some spare copies of the photographs that came out from the DTI this afternoon — we ran off dozens to send out to the regional forces , but I snaffled six . ’ |
11 | I was really depressed at the thought of coming in to the office this morning . |
12 | The food , and the mud on our wellingtons , and sometimes the faint tang of cordite coming up from the cellar all give me a good , tight , thrilling feel when I think about them . |
13 | Will the right hon. and learned Gentleman consult the Confederation of British Industry , which is coming round to the view that a 40 per cent . |
14 | ‘ I 've been hoping you 'd come down to the beach these last three days , ’ he went on . |
15 | Though he has yet to finish on a winning side — Great Britain lost both tests and were defeated 8-O at Leigh — & name is confident the side will come up with the goods this time . |
16 | It would come up in the conversation all the time , ‘ So you 've been separated from your husband and you have no boyfriends ? ’ — No — ‘ Are n't you interested in having boyfriends ? ’ — No — Because she was man-mad she could n't understand why I was n't . |
17 | ‘ By the way , I never did ask you — what made you come round to the cottage that night ? ’ |
18 | ‘ Come down to the stables some time . |
19 | up all the way along and er you come out along the road all the way up past |
20 | Now that 's something that erm particularly that last point , that audit committees that are established in most efficient companies want to look at and I come back to the point that audit ought to be looked at as something that assists companies in efficiency as well as a mechanism for detecting fraud and yet the government does n't appear to be examining that . |