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

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31 ‘ They 're going to come in at the far end . ’
32 er he wants money coming in to the central fund er if has in two years time to face a , a trial , these allegations so be it , but meanwhile he wants the money to come in to the central fund for the reason he 's outlined
33 I expect further applications to come in during the next year and , with time , a growing number of applications as the benefits are seen to come through .
34 In January of 1825 Barratt had decided upon an ambitious and costly project ; a deep adit level to be driven as a cross-cut , some 230 yds. downstream from Taylor 's Level into the eastern bank of Red Dell Beck and in a northerly direction , to come in below the old workings and to explore the vein , especially below that section expected to be opened up by Taylor 's .
35 Ed Morrison allowed John Jeffrey to come in from an offside position and ‘ collect ’ a passing movement between two Japanese players while Hayashi was tackled without the ball when a try seemed certain for Japan .
36 the people that have left are sort of in the recession and that now , there 's all the really big business people and that that have come down to the same level as everybody else .
37 that are grumbling cos they 've come down , but really they 've come down to the same level as
38 Fairfax — Fahfakhs — who was a big man in the government had come down to the little town where Tepilit was held .
39 My only other close encounter with a paraglider was finding one grounded in a quagmire in the Arrochar Alps , where the poor man had come down in the wrong glen , leaving him miles to walk back to any road .
40 A lot of flood water had come down from the upper reaches of the Cherwell , and a body placed in the river , say , at Lonsdale Road …
41 How this name originated I have no idea , but I do know that it has been around for many generations for a jingle about this name has come down from the 19th century and it went : " Old Cribb , Young Cribb and Young Cribbs Son , if it had n't a been for Old Cribb there would n't have been none " .
42 Either a spark had come down from the old fellow 's hole up there or him with hobnail boots had trod on er black powder and set it off and his hole went out underneath his feet .
43 Friends of the Earth criticized the lack of concrete suggestions , claiming that " the government has come along with a blank sheet of paper and asked the public to fill it in " .
44 This is the second new recording of Kismet to have come along in the last couple of years .
45 " Ask Dr. Lorrimer to come down for a few minutes , will you please ? "
46 I ask him to come down for a few days and I also invite Lady De Marr .
47 He was intended to come down at the wrong moment , disappear , do the same again , then go shooting through the roof when the mechanics of the wire go wrong .
48 ‘ If you 'd be kind enough to come down to the front door , I 'll explain everything . ’
49 He needed to come down from a greater height than most .
50 Sixty miles they used to come over for a good evening at those and maybe two principles
51 Before returning to England he was asked to persuade Gladstone to come over for the 1878 Yale ‘ commencement ’ but he would plead in vain .
52 Second , the Old English , descendants of settlers who had come over with the first wave of English conquest during the Middle Ages .
53 Sorry , the ghost has n't come over from the other side of the door , it just keeps moving by itself .
54 The doctor was too young to have come over in the last war .
55 In a way , failure to come through with the right steps is deception , because most social interaction is based on expectations of behaviour and to set up expectations and then thwart them must qualify as deception .
56 The Beatles/Stones/Kinks/Peters And Lee have come up with a real smasher this time
57 However , by handling the machine with some software , Comet Data could have come up with a real bargain .
58 So Clinton has come up with a mixed bag of tricks : some of his proposals will be interpreted as inflationary ( the new mandates on business , for example — including a requirement that all employers spend a minimum of 1.5% of payroll on continuing education and training ) .
59 Land has come up with a credible answer in his Retinex theory of colour perception ( Land 1974 ) .
60 Perhaps , thought Robert , he had simply been playing for time and had now come up with a credible answer .
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