Example sentences of "come [adv prt] through the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | It turned out to have come in through the curved zip which is unprotected by a weather flap . |
2 | ( Like many British design engineers at the time — and unlike Continental or American ones — he had no university training and had come up through the usual apprenticeship route with evening and part-time study . ) |
3 | Er , this refers back to something said , a little while ago , talking about the fitness of judges , having come up through the legal system . |
4 | There was something in his walk — his whole aspect — as if , instead of having come out through the front gate , he had squeezed through a secret hole in the fence . |
5 | So a big change in the way that we are arranged has actually come about through the general management structure , and we 're hoping that this will give us more room , if you like to start looking at priorities , and to move the budget around in accordance with our feelings about those priorities . |
6 | It went on to note that many of the most effective schemes had come about through the voluntary sector as a result of individual enterprise or a one person crusade — not as a logical outcome of a strategic planning process . |
7 | I could relive it every time I came in through the front door . |
8 | She was hanging up the jacket of her plum-coloured suit when Rebecca came in through the outer door . |
9 | He looked up when Donna Frizzell came in through the back door , and was startled to see that her hat was awry and her makeup smudged beyond repair . |
10 | He came in through the back door on Lily 's afternoon out . |
11 | Her father came in through the back door . |
12 | The hours passed , daylight faded , and the sounds of a warm September evening came in through the open window . |
13 | A little breeze came in through the open window and set the hanging light swinging , so that her face was now shadowed , now glistening pale in the electric glare . |
14 | She turned as two uniformed policemen came in through the main entrance . |
15 | ‘ When we played MCC at Lord 's they had 10 county captains , if I remember rightly , and one player , J.W. Hearne , came out of the players ' gate , and the rest came out through the main entrance . |
16 | That was the last time that really hit me because if I 've got my facts correct , I think when we played England at Lord 's they all came out through the same gate , ’ Kerr said . |
17 | Suddenly she came out through the last curtain of trees and found herself looking down over sunlit green meadowland to where a railway line wound like a serpent through a cutting at the foot . |
18 | Painfully , looking up at him , she saw a good strong profile , sandy hair tipped with gold from the sun coming in through the lace-curtained window . |
19 | But Marc 's business in the stable must have only taken a minute because he was coming in through the great oak doors even before she reached the foot of the stairs . |
20 | I thought we were going to have a visitor coming in through the back door . |
21 | She had been waiting on Dreadnought to watch the water coming in through the main leak . |
22 | Well unfortunately if , if I did have a delivery of coal it would come in through the other entrance . |
23 | ‘ Make foreign things work for China ’ , ran one slogan but it recognised that ‘ flies and pests ’ would come in through the open door as well as fresh air to revitalise the stuffy atmosphere in China . |
24 | ‘ Did you see him come in through the back door ? ’ |
25 | come in through the open window , rape her , |
26 | If the letter then comes back through the dead letter office , the plaintiff 's solicitor should make his own application to set aside any interlocutory judgment he has signed . |