Example sentences of "[verb] come [adv prt] of the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Little hard news has come out of the world 's biggest advertising group since it put the division on the block .
2 ‘ This has come out of the blue , and we are due to go to Argentina next summer , ’ said Wood .
3 Even more interesting chemistry has come out of the matrix isolation work on metal carbonyls .
4 The other lesson that has come out of the work within the RAF and from the work done outside is that expert systems in particular , but AI in general will not come about as stand-alone , independent systems , but will be embedded or connected to existing or planned conventional computing .
5 CPMA Managing Director , Nigel Rushman , claims that several other sponsors have already signed for the Sevens spectacular in April at Murrayfield , but for a variety of reasons none has come out of the woods yet .
6 If any good has come out of the Mandy 's story , it is the barrage of publicity it has provided on under-age sex .
7 SOMETHING good has come out of the NatWest Access computer system foul-up which left customers with muddled statements .
8 The appointment of Sally Coleman to the job of manager of Waterstones at Harrods from her current post running the Covent Garden outpost of the empire has come out of the blue .
9 Moreover , there is nothing in the 152-page report to satisfy the Opposition , industry or the few remaining Tory rebels that the Government has come out of the review with a national energy policy .
10 ‘ He seems to have come out of the race very well , but we 'll know how well by next week , ’ said Francois Boutin .
11 One of the most important results to have come out of the work is the demonstration that similar molecular those in other larger and more conventionally studied organisms .
12 " Welcome as always , Peter , " said Sir Edmund affably , " but you look as if you 've come out of the sea .
13 Would er my honourable friend agree with me that one of the reasons why we 've come out of the recession so well is the fact that we do n't have a social contract and .
14 ‘ Lovat was enquiring about you earlier on , Piper , ’ shouted one of the medics who had come out of the barn to tend to the wounded .
15 We had just come out of a 12.30 matinee and the street was burning in the sun and those who had come out of the theatre was cool and real but the others in the street were moving in a white light that had them like shadows .
16 had come out of the house .
17 Lee and his stepdad had come out of the shed .
18 Soon I had come out of the field and was walking along the path opposite where my home would be .
19 Instead , he concentrated on a bit of good news that had come out of the Munich mess .
20 He followed her , howling and swearing , so that Teresa , who had come out of the kitchen at the tremendous noise , cowered against the door and put up her arms to protect herself from what she believed would be an attack .
21 Miss Thomas said he had been concerned that the call had come out of the blue .
22 It had come out of the blue : a brief note from her , saying that she had to undergo a surgical operation .
23 Far from it : he had come out of the darkness and was full of hope and plans .
24 By that time , their wives had come out of the crowd and got hold of them , and were taking them away .
25 In it Christian psychiatrists , care workers , medical experts , ministers and those who had come out of the occult scene , spoke of the appalling wake of damage left by the occult .
26 She had tried to explain this feeling to Gay and Felicity , when they had come out of the Jade Cockatoo on their last night together ; but she had known all the time that it was n't a thing that could be explained .
27 These men had come out of the tubes of a submarine , probably a Delta class .
28 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 .
29 They had come out of the Hearing without their children , and without knowing how long it might be before they were able to be together again .
30 This led to the collapse in many universities of not only traditional moral theories but also many of the great idealistic philosophies ( such as Kant 's , for example ) that had come out of the Enlightenment itself .
  Next page