Example sentences of "[noun] come [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The second point is that of course as we accept into the role of opposition indeed to give these alternative proposals , give this particulary case to come within the government guidelines . |
2 | Regional council allocations for 1993-94 , excluding the money to come from the EC , will vary from £13.6 million in Borders Region to almost £209 million in Strathclyde . |
3 | Expert systems are the first commercial products to come from the world of Artificial Intelligence research . |
4 | ‘ I 'd have liked Naylor to come into the firm , ’ Guthrie answered for him . |
5 | They merely pave the way for an increasing proportion of those emissions to come from the burning of imported coal . |
6 | Nevertheless , this sentence has the effect of making the click come before the shutting , thus reversing the normal precedence of cause to effect . |
7 | Mr Takeshita wants that election to come after the Paris economic summit in mid-July , hoping that the voters will be impressed with his statesmanlike performance in dealing with the Latin debt crisis . |
8 | Once she 'd made her decision to come to the Dordogne , Sabine had read up as much as possible on the area , and she knew that Bergerac wines had been overshadowed in the past by the great vignobles of Bordeaux . |
9 | ‘ I made the decision to come into the business to please my father when he was dying . |
10 | In the most emotional speech of the day , Mr Alexander Rutskoy , the Vice-President , appealed for parliament to come to the aid of the Russian minority in the TransDniestr region of Moldova , the scene of bitter fighting in recent months . |
11 | Two problems are thus solved at once : it becomes clear that terminology does not refer only to grammar , and the reasons for the terminology come before the terminology itself . |
12 | The greater part come from the area around the Black Sea , concentrating especially on the Urartian Empire ; relations between the Greeks and the Thracians and Scythians ; and the art of Sarmatia . |
13 | And I have seen them at the mid-day rest hour of twelve to one , I have seen a ploughman come into the stable , shake up the straw in the stall of his leading beast and lie down there and sleep . |
14 | Only when they captured last season 's Royal Liver League crown did prospects of All Ireland glory come into the equation . |
15 | Because of the distance of my journey I had been given permission to come during the morning , and there were no other visitors . |
16 | Mention a low cost tank and all the issues of new or salvaged glass , glass thickness , and quality of build come to the fore . |
17 | Strong , virile performances of two of the finest of all Tudor settings of the Mass come from the choir of St John 's College Cambridge on a label not normally associated with early music , mid-price EMI Eminence . |
18 | While the characters flirt with each other in improbable configurations , love , marriage and money come under the microscope . |
19 | Most reforming governments are using one or more of the three principles that underlie the reorganisation of Britain 's national health service ( NHS ) : separating buyers of care from providers of care ; forcing the providers to compete for contracts from buyers ; and making money come with the patient . |
20 | The Moon was one of the first objects to come under the scrutiny of the newly-invented telescope . |
21 | If the EEC did wish to go beyond the 1962 agreement on agriculture , the arrangements of which were in any case due to expire in 1965 , if financing was permitted to come from the EEC 's own resources , and if the latter were to be levied on imports , then it was sensible for the EEC budget to come under the control of the European Parliament . |
22 | However , your willingness to come to the aid of your fellow readers is causing a few headaches in our office . |
23 | Or , as Niall Fitzduff put it , the community ‘ is not to be destroyed at the whim of mining company ’ while nothing could ‘ compensate us or the generations to come for the loss of our community ’ . |
24 | With the housing market still struggling to recover , the Bonners may not be moving in the very near future — but it 's rare for follies to come on the market , especially ones you can live in — so it may not be long before a buyer comes along keen to take up residence in Enoch 's Tower . |
25 | They waited tea for another twenty minutes , before Beth addressed the two impatient children with the solemn words , ‘ If the others do n't have the good manners to come to the table at the proper time , then we 'll start without them . ’ |
26 | This Act amended the 1944 legislation which had divided schooling at age 11 between primary and secondary , by allowing the break to come between the ages of 10 and 12 , to cover the development of middle schools . |
27 | He called to Eleanor to come into the kitchen . |
28 | The backswing can be compared to chopping down a tree with and axe ; power and speed come from the distance the axe is swung back . |
29 | Meanwhile , the NSF-controlled radio and television services had been calling its supporters to come to the square ; some were brought by lorry , and by mid-evening they had forced the anti-NSF demonstrators , now outnumbered , to retreat from the Square . |
30 | The Queen 's Bench and Chancery Divisions are no longer distinct courts , though , as a matter of working convenience , matters which involve mainly the Common Law come before the Queen 's Bench ; those which largely involve Equity come before the Chancery Division . |