Example sentences of "[vb mod] come [adv prt] [adj] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 It 's not mentioned anywhere I think it ought to come up first in Q P9 does n't it ?
2 Scrumpy should come up , scrumpy should come up all clouded you know , you know with bits of sheep and er bit bits of sheep and rats and that lying about in it were they 've thrown them into the you think I 'm joking do n't you ?
3 If the user is searching for " rats " , records indexed under " rat(s) " should come out first .
4 It should come out clean and hot to the touch .
5 Bake for at least 1 hour or until the cake has just begun to shrink from sides of tin and is springy to the touch — a skewer inserted into the centre should come out clean .
6 Test with a skewer , which should come out clean .
7 Sparkle 's recessed transom should come in useful while cruising
8 The appendix on useful verbs should come in handy for those not up on adventure jargon , but be careful with the address section — a lot of them are now out of date so be prepared for some lack of response in some cases .
9 The machines have built-in fans — which should come in handy for any Pentium-based cousins no doubt — and come with removable 80Mb , 120Mb or 200Mb 2.5″ disks .
10 ‘ In that case you must come over some time and let me show you around .
11 A Win bet means that the horse you select must come in first place and the amount that you win will depend on the odds .
12 Nowadays the buildings were filled with furniture awaiting repair , lawn-mowers , deck chairs , tea chests full of bottling equipment or archaic kitchen utensils which ‘ might come in useful one day ’ , two deep freezers and a decrepit tricycle and a rocking horse , the property of Paul Young , their only child .
13 Trouble was , Sidney decided to go back to get the sentry 's rifle , obviously thinking it might come in useful .
14 Its abolition was recommended as long ago as 1967 but nothing has been done — one suspects a feeling that it might come in useful one day .
15 You never know when it might come in useful .
16 More probably it was the product of the average scientist 's well-known unwillingness to get rid of anything if he thought that it might come in useful at some time in the future .
17 Never know when the knowledge might come in useful . ’
18 The observations might come in useful later .
19 She might come in useful .
20 You could never tell when they might come in useful .
21 ‘ I thought it might come in useful , ’ Rebecca agreed .
22 When I gatecrashed your life I suppose you thought I might come in useful as some kind of antidote — but it did n't work . ’
23 Suppose a notebook might come in useful to jot anything down or whatever .
24 Some sessions involve a heavy work-out , so a spare , dry karategi might come in handy for the second session .
25 I ca n't think of a single occasion in which this might come in handy .
26 ‘ They might come in handy for making your trap , ’ he said .
27 The KGB owed MI6 a favour which might come in handy one day .
28 It could be that the acronym RICE might come in handy .
29 At this time it was filled with the sort of junk that might come in handy one day if one could remember where one had put it .
30 It 's a feature that might come in handy when building an annual report : the user selects a field and chooses the added ‘ delegate ’ option from the menu , and can then send the spreadsheet to a colleague with the field highlighted and instructions to fill it in .
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