Example sentences of "[noun] comes [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 On quite a number of occasions that enthusiasm spills over and then another emotion comes to the surface .
2 This beautiful bob comes from The Collections Hair Club
3 Thus , the Carlton book of puzzles will come by courtesy of and collaboration with Mensa , while its book on dinosaurs comes with the authority of the Natural History Museum .
4 With Husqvarna , that pleasure comes without the spadework .
5 The pleasure comes from the elegance of the compromise you strike between where the water wants to go ( guided by gravity and the medium it 's moving over ) and what you want to do with it .
6 The pleasure comes from the fact that , as Mr Larcher pointed out sweetly , Hull is where the Vikings landed before going on to found Jorvik [ York ] .
7 Radon comes from the uranium that occurs naturally in the ground .
8 The allegation comes in the TUC 's response to a Government consultation paper on scrapping the holiday .
9 This is probably true ; my main concern is that no harm comes to The Boys . ’
10 In an implicit reminder that 380,000 Soviet troops were still stationed on East German soil , he said : ‘ We firmly declared that we will see to it that no harm comes to the GDR . ’
11 Some 62% of European turnover comes from the UK , the rest from Germany , Austria , Switzerland and Italy .
12 Closure comes in the base 's sixtieth year .
13 The study comes in the wake of preliminary work with red-legged partridges which showed that a mixture of pesticides can greatly increase the dangers of a any single chemical .
14 ‘ No mail comes to the house . ’
15 The quite understandable confusion comes in the area of just what is meant by persuasion and permission .
16 When an employee comes into the workplace , s/he no longer opens the paper mail first but will turn on the computer and read what messages have been left overnight or since the last viewing .
17 The final irony comes with the observation that future safeguards ‘ must include optimal palliative care ’ .
18 The programme comes on the day police launched a new initiative to prevent such large gatherings taking place .
19 But Irvine 's job boost comes at the expense of Workington , where Volvo 's bus operations were located before the transfer to Scotland as part of a rationalisation .
20 The second attack on SERPS comes in the form of incentives given for contracting out .
21 The poet comes to the conclusion that despite all the life which is slowly drifting away there is one thing which is undying , and that is her ‘ love ’ for him .
22 Theft comes within the definition ,
23 The attention-grabbing deal comes as the US market , which in the past has made up more than 40 per cent of sales of the Coventry-produced supercars , shows the first signs of upturn in three years .
24 But a great deal of research and money needs to be invested when a new product and a completely new chemical comes on the market , and there 's been many examples in the past of things being released .
25 Another more important criticism of Marx 's and Engels 's technological sequences comes from the fact that they give the impression that progression through these technological stages was an inevitable progression from lower to higher .
26 So that 's the only place , I think , where you 're going to find , where the word is a plural , the apostrophe comes before the s , is where the plural did n't end in an s .
27 Light comes from the left .
28 Then Pip 's friend Biddy comes to the forge as housekeeper , but Pip has no romantic interest in her as he is still in love with Estella and not satisfied with himself and his way of life .
29 This capability comes through the use of a virtual file system compatible with NFS .
30 But , in fact , most methane comes from the action of bacteria on organic waste in swamps , rice paddy fields and refuse tips .
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