Example sentences of "[noun] have come [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | The Duttons had come a hundred years before to the long straggling village of Sherborne in the archaically beautiful Borne Valley , where Thomas Dutton had built the original house of Sherborne Park in 1551 . |
32 | Man had come a long , long way from his hominoid ancestry . |
33 | That newspapers had come a long way in the interim period was beyond doubt ; that they were to travel even further was to be confirmed by the manner in which the Cadburys disposed of the News Chronicle in 1960 . |
34 | Western Europe had come a long way since 1945 . |
35 | Curtain hardware has come a long way since the days of the narrow brass rod and rings . |
36 | MacMillan has come a long way since 1963 but Hermanas can still grip when done as well as this . |
37 | Even if men 's fashion has come a long way since the Sixties , the overwhelming inspiration , Cerruti concedes , is still the archetypal English businessman 's suit . |
38 | But with understanding had come a growing determination that she would never fall into the same trap — would never allow herself to be ruled by a foolish , hoping heart . |
39 | Rufus had come a long way since the Goblander days and the car he got into to drive himself to the hospital he attended two mornings a week was a Mercedes , not yet a year old . |
40 | Simulators have come a long way in recent years and today many of them use screen addressing to update the information . |
41 | Into this situation have come a few rude intrusions . |
42 | Just after Manning had come the agnostic Tyndall , talking about the identity of radiant heat and light ; and just before Stanley , the militant anti-christian W. K. Clifford had held forth on the education of the people , and especially on the importance of technical drawing . |
43 | So both groups had come a similar distance in the sense of having the indications that there was something interesting to pursue further . |
44 | Contemporary psychology has come a long way from the time when J. B. Watson , the first behaviourist , forbade the consideration of non-observable entities . |
45 | BED and Breakfast has come a long way since the days when fearsome dragon landladies belched fire and brimstone over their terrified guests . |
46 | There is no gainsaying the fact that London-born Eleanor Bowen has come a long way since her last exhibition at the Durham Art Gallery some eight years ago . |
47 | Surprisingly , out of this mish-mash has come a positive development , in which the public sector institutions are giving the idea of ‘ an academic community ’ a completely new reality . |
48 | AIR travel has come a long way at Aldergrove since the first wide-eyed civilian passengers flew there 30 years ago . |
49 | Today the Garrett manufacturing vase shows the company to have come a long way from the first detectors built on the garage bench . |
50 | The Carolingians had come a long way from the single ancestral beer-hall : the chief officers would invite groups of the young men to their houses ( mansiones ) for dinner , " not to encourage gluttony , but for the sake of promoting true rapport ; and rarely would a week go by without each [ youth ] receiving one such invitation from someone " . |
51 | First we felt that women have come a long way given the very radical and novel nature of their demands to enter public life as individuals in their own right . |
52 | Microwave ovens have come a long way since they first appeared in our kitchens about 20 years ago , but how do you know which type will suit your style of cooking ? |
53 | It is strange how attitudes have come the full circle . |
54 | In the event , the announcement was premature ; but fusion researchers have come a long way since then |
55 | Tank decor has come a long way in recent years from the garish backdrop , and the odd lump of rock with a few dying plants . |
56 | Whitham has come a long way from April 16 , 1988 when he won the Enkalon 1,000cc race and became one of the few English riders to score at Kirkistown at that time . |
57 | Determinedly and irrevocably into the American language has come the modern reference to ‘ the underclass ’ . |
58 | But this is exactly what we might have expected : with the emergence of the black British identity has come a matching linguistic persona , neither London nor Jamaican , but " London Jamaican " . |
59 | Microscopy has come a long way since the 1670s when Antonie van Leewenhoek used his relatively crude instruments to see for the first time the bacteria that inhabit worlds normally hidden from the naked eye . |
60 | Er psychiatry has come a long way and er certain diagnostic st studies and diagnostic tests are taken of the individual erm and the doctors conclude whether or not the the work contributed to the problem or not . |