Example sentences of "[noun] come [adv] [adv] [subord] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Apparently his boat came in sooner than expected and docked at Shields , and he came up to the house hoping to see my sister , and he did . |
2 | For example , one of their star turns , David Swift , whose appearance in the first programme of the series staring out at the world through bright blue eyes beneath a battered trilby marked him out as a natural , recalls going to dance halls in the 1950s in search of girls : ‘ I mean there were plenty of songs coming out then where they say , Look at the way she walks . |
3 | Well ca n't we let David come round here when he 's ready ? |
4 | Words come in only as convenient for purposes of illustration . |
5 | ‘ As a result of the transaction , our accounts came out later than anticipated . |
6 | This change came about not because we were getting too big for our binding , rather we felt we could do better justice to the rich pageant of life at Sainsbury 's with more elbow room . |
7 | I had shown determination to come back then when I had been written off . |
8 | Griffith 's breakthrough came almost accidentally as he attempted to forge a career in a new industry about which he knew little . |
9 | Also the stopper came out easily while most of the others were stuck . ’ |
10 | Unlike the work of finance or even the public sector , women have been influential in the presentation of the visual arts in Britain for some time , Sally Townsend talks to Annely Juda and Angela Flowers , two women who started in the gallery business with young children , whose lives came together briefly when they ran galleries next door to each other , two women who , together with their sons , help to shape work on show in central London |
11 | We had misty rain as we started out but the sun came out just as we got to the rapids . |
12 | The matron of Sunningdale was an easy-going woman who let visitors come pretty well when they pleased , this entailing no great inconvenience as few did please . |
13 | The response is encrypted as it is sent , and responses come back faster than pre-PROFS . |
14 | This degree of modification comes about partly because of the greater degree of digestion in mammalian carnivores compared with the regurgitated remains from avian predators , and partly because of their use of teeth to break up prey before digestion . |
15 | This will enable a potential purchaser to come forward up until 1 July with the recommended £2 million or above . |
16 | Julia came round just as he was erecting a kind of tent over her bed . |
17 | I did n't quite belong in the Jewish dorf-just as well , because horsemen came through more than once and left blood and burnt timbers behind them — and did n't quite belong in the hamlet where my father 's people lived — maybe just as well also , because the crucifixes on their walls did n't save them when the cholera came and brought its own kind of pogrom . |
18 | The move came as more than 50 KANU officials and members resigned to join FORD . |
19 | General agreement , though Faye came in only because Roberta did . |
20 | Would Poems came as naturally as Silk Thread . |
21 | Her heart thumped painfully as she remembered him making love to her for the first time , the hard , forceful thrust of his body coming much quicker than she had expected , an abrupt shock after all the gentleness that had gone before . |
22 | Kenny disagrees : ‘ Anthropomorphism comes in only if we attribute to [ animals ] concepts whose possession can not be manifested by recognition and non-verbal reaction ‘ ( 1975 : 51 ) . |
23 | Well I was thrown in at the deep end Different persons came in maybe if we had a job in a hurry and they would say , Oh you 're on at such and such a time at this . |
24 | An empty taxi came along soon after we 'd turned into the Commercial Road . |
25 | Considering that closure for Deepcar station came as early as 1959 , the lavatory sign has done well to survive . |
26 | Gradually these dreams came less often until they stopped altogether , although I still do n't know why I had them in the first place . |
27 | In the previous section , it was argued that major contributions to the growth of scientific knowledge come about either when a bold conjecture is confirmed or when a cautious conjecture is falsified . |
28 | You will find that ease of emphasis comes more readily if you are not standing stiffly to attention while delivering your speech . |
29 | • Many poisons cause as much damage coming back up as they do going down , so do not make him vomit unless you are sure it is safe to do so . |
30 | Is n't that window-cleaner coming more often than he did last year ? |