Example sentences of "come [adv prt] of a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | We turned our ponies and galloped back to the Legation , where we learnt that news had just come in of a great victory for the Shoan army . |
2 | The gifts of the Spirit come out of a living relationship with the Father . |
3 | The staff were also worried about his speech , not seeming to take into account the fact that this was the first time he had come out of a Punjabi-speaking environment and was having to cope with new experiences in a foreign language . |
4 | Mr Blakey came out of a distant glass-house , beyond lawns and flower-beds . |
5 | The words came out of a sobbing smother of frustration and rage . |
6 | Greg Chappell came out of a bad patch when he realised he was playing innings in his head before they happened . |
7 | As I waited , Ryan came out of a near-by block and called to me : |
8 | Jazz is a form of music that came out of a social evolution in black history , and so is rap . |
9 | ANYONE who has tried to sight a ball coming out of a dark background as dusk falls will quickly agree that sightscreens are a very important part of any cricket ground . |
10 | He quietened down then , shaking his head like a man coming out of a deep sleep . |
11 | At the age of 47 , Robert De Niro is coming out of a creative crisis and entering a new phase as a movie mogul . |
12 | MARY SPENCER — Mary = marry , so I would see the lady as a bride coming out of a well-known High Street shop which has somehow been cut cleanly in half . |
13 | If ClarisWorks is in the process of being born and Complete Works shows signs of coming out of a difficult adolescence , then PFS:WindowWorks is the old timer of the three . |
14 | ‘ Only that Frank has seen him a number of times coming out of a special house down there . |
15 | You can come out of a nice pub and go into another bad 'un . |
16 | When it had been screened you 'd got to be in there and the malted barley would come out of a big hole just big enough to get a comb-sack through ; and it used to run into a big heap ; and you 'd got to be inside there a-throwing on it back so it did n't bung up the hole . |
17 | ‘ I promise you , ’ she says , ‘ there is n't a woman who does n't come out of a bad divorce thinking the same thing . ’ |
18 | They looked as if they 'd come out of a medieval illustration . |
19 | One might speculate that one could jump into a black hole in one place and come out of a white hole in another . |
20 | There are solutions of Einstein 's general theory of relativity in which it is possible to fall into a black hole and come out of a white hole . |
21 | You come out of a tight spot smelling of roses . |
22 | What comes out of a black hole , however , will be different from what fell in . |
23 | Ensure that there is adequate community care available for everyone who comes out of a psychiatric hospital after a stay of six months or more . |
24 | In as much that erm it comes out of a different purse |
25 | At one moment the boatswain Jack Allgood comes out of a berserk rage to realise that he , a warrant officer , has allowed his hatred of the captain to lead him into mutiny ; the points of physical detail enforce his emotional agony : |