Example sentences of "come [adv prt] as a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Injuries have hit the club , and coach Billy Lomax had to come on as a substitute midway through the second half . |
2 | It is hard to disappoint someone who may have come in as a last port of call when all other channels to sort out their problems seem closed . |
3 | I feel bitter that while I was out there I was somebody but I 've come back as a third class citizen . |
4 | He wanted his personal belief and his professional expertness to come out as a single attribute . |
5 | But a combination of embarrassment , shock , and some other nameless disturbing emotion caused her initial protest to come out as a soundless squeak . |
6 | Much of this had come about as a direct result of the introduction of the GCSE , as these comments from the Head of Art at ‘ Pope John Paul ’ reveal : |
7 | However , a greater proportion of secondary school teachers than either of the other two phases tend to be unsure about whether any of these changes have come about as a direct result of the review and report . |
8 | Mr Hay left out the experienced campaigners Karen Brown , Vickey Dixon and Jane Sixsmith from the starting line-up , though Sixsmith came on as a late substitute for Joanne Menown . |
9 | thank you and you would accept would n't you , that if we have a brochure , let us say printed for next January , January nineteen ninety four alright , and I came along as a retired person in the Spring of nineteen ninety five or indeed the Summer of nineteen ninety five , fifteen , sixteen , seventeen , eighteen months later , those brochure figures will inevitably be out of date in the sense of being inaccurate would n't they ? |
10 | I came in as a young teacher , enthusiastic , full of new ideas but you soon find that the old attitudes rub off on you , and so you end up thinking , ‘ Oh , why am I doing this ? |
11 | It was often her task to carry it up to the little sitting-room , followed by Mary from the village , who came in as a daily maid , bearing a silver jug of hot water and matches to light all the lamps . |
12 | Mildred tried to shriek , but it only came out as a frenzied croaking . |
13 | Kelly 's question came out as a loud protest . |
14 | Richard was so exhausted with cold and emotion that his laugh came out as a foolish titter . |
15 | Her voice came out as a hoarse whisper and she had to clear her throat . |
16 | The NSA came about as a direct result of the Allied wartime successes in breaking the coded messages of both the Germans and the Japanese . |
17 | Right at the end Inst coach Denis Guiler , forced into coming on as a 50th minute substitute so depleted were his side 's ranks , almost stole the headlines with the winner , but his effort was brilliantly saved by goalkeeper Raymond Geddis . |
18 | It was odd coming over as a tragic heroine . |
19 | All of this is coming about as a direct result of the original plan for the Local Management of Schools and it 's continuing success , in spite of the Labour Group and not because of it , and so I move the amendment my Lord Mayor . |
20 | Even if I went onstage and did a direct rip-off of Jagger or Bowie it would never come off as a complete copy because Blondie is a girl . ’ |
21 | They were kept waiting for just a couple of minutes — ‘ While Mr Magill completes a call ’ in a cool-warm windowless reception area soundproofed so that even the loudest complaint about a bill would come out as a hushed croak then ushered through into an office that was almost straight from Charles Dickens . |
22 | So it is that when Mr Major explains that he has , by devaluing the pound , given British industry an exceptional chance to improve its exports , he insists that ‘ this did not come about as a deliberate act of policy ’ . |
23 | They come in as a net fare operator |
24 | and come back as a bloody teenager with big tits and everything . |
25 | Jettisoning Shakespeare , and talking in a ludicrous mixture of Italian and heavily accented English , he comes on as a hilarious parody of a libidinous Latin , pinching handbags from the audience , flogging dodgy cassette tapes and offering healing laughter after all the grief of the earlier acts . |
26 | When Mr Major waxes philosophical , he comes over as a strange mix of nostalgia and modernism . |
27 | ‘ The strong prejudice against only children comes over as a clear reason for having at least two , ’ she says . |
28 | The baby either comes out as a basic Tampico Club , or if it 's a silver spoon version will end up as a ( TB21 ) Trinidad TC . |