Example sentences of "come [adv prt] at a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To heighten concern about the Convention , Broken Promise could not have come out at a better time .
2 so of course that would 've come out at a later stage , yeah , you know there 's a lot of business miles involved in flying to all these er places .
3 The counsellor made it clear that if they wanted to come back at a later stage , they would be welcome .
4 As the hammer came down at a then-record $53.9 million , Mr Payson whooped ‘ I think he 'd be happy with that ’ , referring to Van Gogh , who killed himself a year after completing Irises , aged 37 .
5 Socialist Sweden came out at a hefty $27.10 .
6 The generator revved up and down , providing power to the automatic launcher ; it had some sort of randomly set variation built into where it was aiming because the clays came out at a different angle and heading each time .
7 Reaction to their two recently-rescued Sam Powell ales , formerly brewed by the Sam Powell Brewery in Newtown , Powys , is also very encouraging , with repeat orders coming in at a good rate .
8 Eva was coming in at a high spot of the Army 's history .
9 OS/2 will get 8.5% of the total workstation market by 1996 , it says , with Unix coming in at a hefty 47% and Windows NT possibly capturing 30–40% of the office desktop/workstation market .
10 Less than 36 hours after the discovery of the body , facts were coming in at a fair rate , though it was still not possible to decide which were relevant and which not .
11 That grievous bodily harm thing was coming up at a special court this morning , but that ought to be all wrapped up in half an hour .
12 The entry level 386SX with 2MB RAM comes in at a mere £499 .
13 As a stake in society comes in at a higher cost , the old certainties begin to wither .
14 The service block comes off at a right angle at the back and forms a sort of court where you arrive .
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