Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [pers pn] came [prep] " in BNC.

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1 We 'd much rather you came to the banquet .
2 He came from all over Macaw or somewhere down there he came from .
3 So how he came to be carrying a cannister of CS gas is being invistigated … he may have had an accomplice .
4 You know , it is only when he came to that final page that he realized where the theme came from , so absorbed was he in the process of composition .
5 It was only when he came to 1936 that Damiani 's face grew suddenly cold and his hands , until now resting quietly on his knees , began to move in agitation .
6 Very good then , so why he came to earth
7 It was after ten o'clock when I came to consciousness of the world about me again .
8 It was nine o'clock when he came to us .
9 Well all where it came from .
10 We ought to be more concerned as to exactly how they came into being .
11 Just how it came to be extinguished was something of a mystery , and even the Israelis who live in Ben Ami — the farming settlement that has been built on the site — had scarcely heard the name .
12 its not how they came into the world of real names to stick with prat names like Beatrice and , I mean I know its old royal and that and I mean fancy going to school in that bloody Henry and William , I mean William 's not too bad
13 Not when it came to it , ’ Albert said .
14 Not when it came to that .
15 Not when it came to it .
16 Shortly afterwards it came under the aegis and support of the Standing Conference of National and University Libraries ( SCONUL ) and the scheme assumed the title of the SCONUL Tape-Slide Group .
17 A little further on they came across a parked Army vehicle around which a number of people were clustered listening to the vehicle 's wireless .
18 A few miles further on they came upon one of the delightful little villages with which the Cotswolds seemed to abound .
19 A little further on we came to a cairn , a perfect match for the cairn on Rise Hill above Garsdale , and another carefully crafted stone man staring out over Dentdale towards Lonsdale and the Howgills .
20 Further along she came upon an upturned Welsh dresser with a hand protruding out from underneath it .
21 A long time ago when I was six years old me and Neil went out mise chifing I chut a stown and it naile it a wondow then we ran off then we came to somedody garben then we clad up there tree and shouted fatet .
22 There was little interest and once again it came into the hands of James Joiner .
23 And after failing to find it once again it came into the porch and complained loudly and so I went outside and with a paint brush I marked the entrance to the hive with three blobs of paint of a different colour and then with a piece of cardboard I guided the tiny winged creature towards the marks on the wall and it went inside .
24 So then you we can tighten in on the site to not only a place actually on the site but how far down they came from as well .
25 And the university provided them , greatly goosed on , I might say , by the then Vice Chancellor Aisa Briggs , who was very excited by the project , and that 's really how I came to be connected with the university .
26 I mean originally where we came from you know they er , the snows and er and the cold weather we were eleven hundred feet above sea level
27 ‘ But that was n't why I came to Slane . ’
28 From then on she came to the surface more ; it was n't long before she said to him , ‘ This can not go on , have n't you anything better to do than being my chauffeur all day ? ’
29 That was a bit of a shock , cos I was dreaming about summat about a train and Marie going away , and then suddenly I came to and found myself in the station .
30 Nigel Lawson revealed in his memoirs just how close he came to introducing it when he was Chancellor in 1984 .
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