Example sentences of "come [adv prt] against the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If you are planning to build your own conservatory , you are likely to come up against the new Pat N of the Building Regulations .
2 From the time of James 's second Indulgence , most Whigs and Nonconformists had come out against the suspending power , on the promise that if they stuck by the Church , they would be given some measure of toleration .
3 For the first time Gould came up against the devastating effects of unlimited commercial exploitation .
4 Perhaps he came up against the Edwardian equivalent of a conservation lobby .
5 She came up against the unsolved riddle with a horrible jerk .
6 Unfortunately for Glanvil , many ghost stories are faked ; and investigators of the psychic phenomena of two centuries later came up against the same problem .
7 The dropping man came up against the wrought iron , and glass powder sifted like fairy dust down into the courtyard .
8 ONCE-RACED MILIYEL * , who came up against the 1,000 Guineas ante-post favourite Musicale when both made their debut at Lingfield last season , may open her account in the Geoffrey Barling Maiden Fillies ' Stakes ( 2.00 ) at Newmarket today .
9 The table provided in the Library note projects that we shall not come up against the upper ceiling of the present capacity in either this or the next financial year .
10 Once again we come up against the indissoluble limit between the Spirit and Jesus .
11 This is of course a perfectly defensible approach , but it seems to me a limited one : inevitably one comes up against the micro-macro conundrum .
12 However one looks at the early movies one comes up against the decisive contribution of the showmen , but obviously their role was most noticeable in the way the movies were presented .
13 This panics the fish , which immediately bolts , comes up against the heavy bomb which pulls the hook in some more , and then the back stop hits the bomb and penetration of the hook is complete .
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