Example sentences of "had come [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Second , the Old English , descendants of settlers who had come over with the first wave of English conquest during the Middle Ages .
2 Trevor Williamson , an 82nd minute replacement for Stephen McBride , floated in a corner which was knocked down and McMullan , who had come on in the 64th , hammered it into the net .
3 ( 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 . )
4 It had been such a tight squeeze to get the Princess into the boat house at all , that someone had come up with the bright idea of removing the edge boards from the quay platforms on either side .
5 ‘ They seemed convinced a whole lot of people had come up from the big city to show off , to be grandees , which was far from the truth .
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 The revolution in New Testament scholarship which had come about during the hundred years before he wrote The Problem of Pain appears to have passed him by .
8 It had been Dr Rolleston 's great sorrow that he had not been able to help children who had come in with the dreaded Infantile Paralysis , not that any other professor in Europe had been able to do better than by careful nursing stop the paralysis spreading .
9 This beggar had come in to the fitting shop , corner at the back corner , where he should n't have been .
10 Then Beryl went on to outline a couple of job offers that had come in within the last few days .
11 Said his friend-cum-mentor , Irving Layton , in looking back over the period , ‘ I had a very sharp feeling in the early fifties that poetry in Canada had come in from the cold and was starting to gain momentum . ’
12 Reproaching herself for not having unlocked it when she had come in from the main door , she rose quickly and went to open up .
13 If Lili had come in by the back door it had been very late indeed .
14 The devilish smile , oblique and sharp as a scar , had come back to the gaunt face .
15 ‘ To us , he had come back from the dead , ’ his mother , Camilla Swann , said yesterday .
16 When Cardiff had come back from the dead , he had shrunk away back down the hessian-screen corridor towards Rohmer .
17 We had come back like the full circle of our route , intact .
18 Fairfax — Fahfakhs — who was a big man in the government had come down to the little town where Tepilit was held .
19 My only other close encounter with a paraglider was finding one grounded in a quagmire in the Arrochar Alps , where the poor man had come down in the wrong glen , leaving him miles to walk back to any road .
20 A lot of flood water had come down from the upper reaches of the Cherwell , and a body placed in the river , say , at Lonsdale Road …
21 Either a spark had come down from the old fellow 's hole up there or him with hobnail boots had trod on er black powder and set it off and his hole went out underneath his feet .
22 The empiricism that had come out of the 19th century as the dominant intellectual mode had been twisted to the right , so to speak , by the ‘ white emigration ’ from Europe .
23 It had come out of the blue : a brief note from her , saying that she had to undergo a surgical operation .
24 Whilst they had been watching the protesters , a waitress had come out of The Crossed Keys hotel on the corner of the square carrying a tray of interesting-looking glasses .
25 Forest , held to a 1-1 draw at the City Ground , were 3-1 ahead with 17 minutes of normal time left , and deservedly so ; they had come out for the second half bristling with determination to make quality tell .
26 If it had come out at the same time , it would have been submerged , and if it had come out afterwards it would have been seen as merely reactive .
27 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 .
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