Example sentences of "[adv] come [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Certainly he was convinced from the beginning that a solution could only come through Algerian self-determination and the democratically expressed will of the French people .
2 These are written with the precision that can only come from deep knowledge .
3 Further growth of the University will only come from additional investment from other , non-Governmental sources — investment that will be generated through the Campaign for Resource .
4 And the takeover threat does n't just come from foreign television companies , but from cable companies and even phone companies as well .
5 Non-pelagic species , which do not normally come into direct contact with ice , appear to avoid freezing simply by supercooling ; their fluids remain ice-free even 1–2°C below freezing point .
6 Of course , it could not come without national repentance and renewal on a grand scale .
7 This competition can not come through direct market mechanisms .
8 Taiwan must not come under communist control ; it was not essential for the United States to control the island but the Chinese communists must not capture it .
9 The concentration and academic character of that sixth form did not come under serious pressure before the 1960s , and even then remained a powerful influence upon those who taught and studied in grammar schools .
10 The Commission also took a stronger stand in respect of two other countries on its agenda : Cuba will not come under special scrutiny by a representative of the UN Secretary-General and the Expert on Equatorial Guinea , a country which receives assistance under the UN Advisory Services Program , has been requested to study the human rights situation there .
11 It did not come into general use until the latter half of the seventeenth century .
12 Mrs Hnatiuk 's five little girls were still in elementary school and , consequently , she did not come into frequent contact with high school students .
13 Economics must not come before democratic politics .
14 Thus 1848 and 1849 were the years of great reform of the Austrian school system ; the defeat of the army by France/Piedmont in 1859 was followed by the establishment of constitutional government ; and the defeat of the army by Prussia in 1866 brought liberalism to as close as it would ever come to full state power and led to the establishment of the dual monarchy the following year .
15 It may have been a recurrent nova , and although it is probably unlikely that it will ever come within binocular range , if it reappears at all , there is no harm in looking for it .
16 We hear a PowerOpen consortium is in bud and will probably come into full flower in the fall : petals include Bull , IBM , Apple , Motorola and Thomson at least .
17 This may be present in natural sources such as mine water but may also come from atmospheric pollution , from flocculation with alum , and from reuse of water .
18 At least 25 per cent of original programmes will now come from independent companieswith a proper proportion of European origin .
19 Having failed in their attempt to attract individuals or sections from the ILP into their Party , the Communists were now advocating a " United Working Class Party " , a combination with the ILP which would inevitably come under Communist leadership .
20 Nevertheless , rubber studs did not immediately come into general use because the process of changing them ruined the soles of the boots .
21 Some help in the process of internalizing these ideas will nowadays come from national curriculum guidance .
22 You do n't come under key stage until you go into wa er er year eight I think it is .
23 He wo n't come at short notice .
24 They do n't simply come through repetitive habit do they ?
25 Alternatively it might well come through environmental research , including work in environmental geomorphology .
26 If you scatter seed on the ground you will build up a substantial clientele of birds such as chaffinches which do not readily come to hanging food and birdtables .
27 Without Sir Martin , the men and policies he stood for will undoubtedly come under fresh scrutiny .
28 Even where we have overcome difficulties of technology and resources , as , for example , in producing multi-media stacks using Apple 's HyperCard ( or SuperCard ) , there is market resistance to purchasing what might otherwise come as public domain or ‘ shareware ’ and little that can be done to prevent illegal copying and resulting saturation of a limited market before costs are recovered .
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