Example sentences of "come [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] at " in BNC.

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1 Because often I would be alone with her up there : not like other children , having to come down to the drawing-room at five o'clock , brought by nurse , on their best behaviour .
2 ‘ I wonder if you 'd care to come up to the stable at the house and help me box a pair of geldings of mine ? ’ he was inquiring .
3 No , but the point is that to in all our cases to provide a community resource which is going to be of genuine use to artists and the general public , erm one has to take care that the standards of work and the standards of community facilities are as high as they possibly can be if you want to attract maximum usage , and what we will be trying to do in circumstances like this encourage as many people to come up to the Gardener at weekends during the summer and have as enjoyable a time as possible .
4 He followed her , howling and swearing , so that Teresa , who had come out of the kitchen at the tremendous noise , cowered against the door and put up her arms to protect herself from what she believed would be an attack .
5 Mind you , I do n't think it 's come out of the washing at the moment , I think it 's getting water .
6 Perhaps everything — not that there is anything — should just have been allowed to come out into the open at that point .
7 That was one of the issues to come out of the accident at Bolton in 1946 .
8 It was an enclave within the duchy lordship of Pickering , which came down to the coast at Filey Brigg in the south and at Scalby , just north of Scarborough , before continuing along the coast towards Whitby .
9 It was an enclave within the duchy lordship of Pickering , which came down to the coast at Filey Brigg in the south and at Scalby , just north of Scarborough , before continuing along the coast towards Whitby .
10 The vicar ‘ came down to the steps at the top of the nave , accompanied by a server with a basket of palms and we all went up and got one except J[ack] . ’
11 I was determined it was at the burn that came down by the distillery at the edge of the town .
12 Spittals ' hands glowed from the diligent rubbing he was applying to them as she came in through the door at ten o'clock .
13 When Jamie came in with the food at gloaming , Cameron asked him for another blanket .
14 He recalls that the Chancellor came in to the store at around 5pm , and stands by this approximate time even though he is well aware that Mr Lamont was then in a Treasury Select Committee at the House of Commons .
15 He came up to the Hilder at the point where the aqueduct pillars crossed it .
16 It was a day of mixed emotions for a player who came up through the ranks at Ayresome Park .
17 Then I came back to the courts at Bisham again before going back to school again at 3pm for history and then I come back and play again afterwards .
18 She remembered another thing too — that the path came out of the wood at the other end within a very short distance of her own house .
19 Presently a woman came out of the door at the side of the house and walked towards them .
20 When he came out of the forces at the end of the Second World War , Billy bought 260 acres ( 105 hectares ) to farm at Dudwa .
21 A large , hairy youth came out of the bathroom at the head of the stairs .
22 ‘ Anyway , ’ said old Eddy Moulton , ‘ when Stanley Furle came out of the Ring at the end of the evening , he fell down the stairs and blacked his eye on the knob of his cane !
23 Superman ( Christopher Reeve ) himself was sometimes hung by wires ( the disadvantage of which is that they might have to be matted out frame by frame by hand ) or supported on a hydraulic arm that came out of the screen at 90° and which , like his shadow , was hidden by his body .
24 A tall thin man came out of the shadows at the bottom of the stone steps .
25 Miss Potts came out of the room at this moment , she eyed Gwendoline with dislike .
26 Ana came out of the pool at that moment and it was a good job she could n't see or her face would not have had the happy smile .
27 When he came out of the prison-camp at the end of the war , he believed Rosie would be waiting for him and when he could not find her , I think it broke his heart . ’
28 I thought we 're gon na so we came out of Paul 's place , behind Belmont Parade , up past the ponds there and that 's and I 'm knackered , I 'm going up river , had no you start at the bottom of Belmont Parade , up those ponds up to the traffic lights where you change buses , that 's all up hill and it 's slow , and you 've just started and you 're not warm and it 's like running out of here , running up that hill there , now you could run up that hill if you got , if you had sort of round a couple of times round nice , no one so more ready to go , you 'd run up there , you come out of here , run down here , not warm , feel you get , well I come out of there and , and you get , you go up past that set of traffic lights , you go up and you 're still struggling past The Bull , that 's still up hill , you get to the , just round that bend and it starts dropping down , and it 's a gradual drop down , below the roundabout and the next roundabout 's pretty level there , not too bad a roundabout , right the way across to Scades Hill , went down Scades Hill , right the way down to Alton , bottom of Alton high street , came out by the toilets at White Hart to High Street , up to house .
29 Just coming in through the door at that very minute was Detective-Constable Edwards .
30 Sorry for coming in under the wire at er nine fourteen according to this clock .
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