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

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1 The event was spread between Coniscliffe , Blackwell and Croft , but not surprisingly , all of the trout action came from the most upstream section between Merrybent and the motorway bridge .
2 Yet nearly two-thirds of the Boards ' revenue came from the generally larger industrial and commercial consumers .
3 The results of this review came to the disturbingly complacent conclusion that , as blacks experience discrimination generally in society , ‘ it would perhaps be more surprising if there was no evidence of discrimination ’ in YTS schemes ( pp. 40–1 ) .
4 The old man stopped in surprise and then craned forward , squinting in the dim light coming through the grimly fanlight .
5 The Northern public-sector schools come from the partly voluntary system of pre-Partition .
6 Passenger pleasure comes from the outstandingly comfortable seats in a beautifully crafted cabin while the driver enjoys excellent control , great visibility and a superb instrument layout .
7 Much of the talent comes from the fiercely competitive world of hip hop dancing : Snakeyes , the Funky Apprentices and Short Cut all show promise , but the star turn is Stretch , a dancer for Ce Ce Peniston and the choreographer on Michael Jackson 's ‘ Remember The Time ’ video .
8 The turning-point came with the triumphantly successful privatization of British Telecom in 1984 for almost £4 billion .
9 Douglas Hurd came to the newly christened Oxford Brookes University … formerly the Polytechnic … to inaugurate an annual lecture series … named for him …
10 Little is known about the religious beliefs of the earlier natives , and the sparse information that survives about the Saxon traditions comes from the hardly objective pens of monastic writers .
11 It was a warm day , the noise of traffic came through the slightly open window .
12 Since all goods are donated , most of them of high quality coming from the more affluent within and outwith the parish , charges for them can be minimal so providing a social service as well as a subsidy towards the hall expenses .
13 Yet the strongest opposition to the treaty came from the very highest ranks of English society : from the Lord Edward , and from Simon de Montfort and his wife Eleanor .
14 There was little to raise the pulse of public life in Paris and the only excitement provided by the monarchy came from the all too numerous attempts to assassinate Louis-Philippe .
15 Many of the girls come from the most appalling backgrounds of abuse and violence and approximately 60% are addicted to drugs .
16 My favourite aperçu comes in the very last paragraph of the final chapter ( ‘ From madrigal to cantata ’ ) , where Carter introduces the idea of a distinct ‘ terza prattica , whose principal vehicle was the emerging aria of the 1620s and 1630s .
17 Omega Tasty dog food coming off the fully automated packing line at Chilton .
18 and with so much steam coming from the forwards all the signs were that Gloucester were going to take sale to the cleaners …
19 More than two-thirds of its students come from the highly industrialized areas of South Wales and another 10 per cent come from Central and North Wales .
20 The biggest surprise comes from the very direct , dynamite-packed power lever .
21 Medoc comes from the most ancient line of necromancers , ’ said the soldier who had asked why Tara 's brightness had been quenched .
22 Mr Ford 's hat came from the ever distinguished hatter Herbert Johnson , 30 New Bond Street , London W1 ( 071–408 1174 ) , as did this particularly dashing black fedora ( above ) priced at £130 .
23 He had been studying soil fungi since 1916 , and wrote a survey of the known inhibitors in 1940 , but his effective contribution to medicine came after the very modest success of tyrocidin and the very great success of penicillin .
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