Example sentences of "[pers pn] come [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ That 's crazy , ’ Anne said , ‘ I 'm sure I came this way … ’ |
2 | I came this way — it 's as long as it 's short — because of Pratesi and his sausage factory . ’ |
3 | I , I came this way and called on Susan , she was n't in , I ran the dog round here and er called on Susan again and she still was n't in , so that was that |
4 | ‘ Well , I thought I 'd best get as far from Dalston as I could , so I came this side of London Bridge and looked for lodgings . |
5 | I came this morning because I think you may be able to help me from your knowledge-of the family and of the area . |
6 | I came this morning , but they were awfully busy . ’ |
7 | Then I can deliver the finished uniform when I come this way again … perhaps in a week or so ? ’ |
8 | See , and I 've helped Kenny out and a few the lads before and like we always finish it that 's why I come this cellar Barry . |
9 | It 's why I wanted you to come this afternoon . |
10 | I shall take your Christmas pudding with me , and the box of dates too , and I shall tell them all how you came this morning with presents and decorations and then found the mistletoe for me ! |
11 | ‘ You came this morning ? |
12 | Why did n't you come this afternoon ? ’ |
13 | Why did you come this way ? ’ |
14 | I came searching for you at the shop and one of your neighbours told me she 'd seen you come this way . ‘ |
15 | Will you come this way please ? ’ |
16 | ‘ Why did n't you come this morning , Chief Inspector ? |
17 | So anything I could offer that would be nice , oh she said I do n't know , now , but I 'll tell you when you come this afternoon and so that she told me there was around five or six o'clock and it was too late so I said well I 'll go on Monday morning , but they er were all closed on Monday morning . |
18 | You 'll meet him if you come this evening . |
19 | We go the long way ; who knows how long it will be before we come this way again ? |
20 | We come this Advent Sunday to the wonderful season of hope . |
21 | ‘ How far have we come this morning ? ’ she asked . |
22 | No it 's okay not to worry , do n't worry about it , it 's alright , we 'll come and pick it up then so if we come any time after sort of tomorrow brilliant , that 's great , thanks every so much for your help , bye . |
23 | They came each year in tens of thousands before the Civil War , in hundreds of thousands for the twenty years after it , until the completion of the railway network and the advance of the plough on the prairies brought the classical period of the ‘ Wild West ’ ( which was essentially a cattle economy ) to an end in the 1880s . |
24 | ‘ There are oak trees , they came that way . |
25 | I think they came that night . |
26 | She wondered if you would mind very much if they came another time . |
27 | They came most nights . |
28 | This Mrs Melburn , the parson 's wife … she seems a motherly figure , in a way , but that bit ’ — she pointed to the page of a letter that was on the table — ‘ that bit tells you why they came this way . ’ |
29 | they came look , they came this way , they did n't go , they did n't go the long way round , I believe ya , they came this way up here |
30 | they came look , they came this way , they did n't go , they did n't go the long way round , I believe ya , they came this way up here |