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

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1 The deal came at the end of the 20th annual session of the intergovernmental commission on economic co-operation between the two countries .
2 ‘ The interview came at the end of a long day .
3 The party boat came to the end of its song , and the party people gave themselves a round of applause .
4 Love admits it will be very difficult for the players , who will be taking on opposition coming to the end of their season and in weather which will be completely different to what most of them have been experiencing over the past six months , though not to captain Bruce Russell , Iain Philip and Alastair Storie , who have spent the winter playing overseas .
5 By late afternoon the FT-SE 100 had made some progress and closed 26.2 up at 2732.4 , with news of the GATT deal coming after the end of trading .
6 With the faint light coming from the end of the alley catching the gold of the embroidery , it looked like a man trying to climb into the space between the timbers .
7 The truly disgraceful bit came at the end , where it said , ‘ Rights Offered : First British Serial only ’ .
8 All the noise came from the end we were in throughout the game .
9 Five of those minutes came at the end of the first half , allowing Hein to score the first of his morale-boosting tries for Oxford in the right corner .
10 It may be significant , as S.D. Keynes has suggested , that the chapters which bear most signs of his influence come at the end , and that their subject matter is closely related to that of the tracts entered before the Letter .
11 AS ITV Sport come to the end of their Football League contract , fingers are being crossed that the championship will be decided before ITV run out of matches .
12 Fortunately the machine came to the end of its cycle at this point and she was able to continue in a more normal tone of voice .
13 This scene came towards the end of an episode in which Frank had already caused havoc in the local library , succeeded in unintentionally dismantling his neighbour 's chicken house and attended an interview for a job selling farming products .
14 Go-ahead to start the final artwork came at the end of spring 1988 with an autumn deadline , providing the option to work from fresh material available throughout the summer .
15 It is particularly appropriate that this first annual review from the Institute and Faculty comes at the end of a year which has seen so much co-operation between our two organisations .
16 So every ten point six minutes , another engine comes off the end .
17 Her moment came at the end of the first course when , without any apparent signal , the parlourmaid came back into the room .
18 This unexpected move came at the end of an NPFL conference which called for the continuation of the peace process and the enforcement of the Yammoussoukro agreement as outlined in the Geneva agreement .
19 Hull 's most important Humberside derby for years comes at the end of a sad week for the club which saw defeat by Widnes on Sunday , and the sacking of Noel Cleal as coach on Monday .
20 Taken from Watership Down — her favourite book — it told how rabbits ' leader Hazel comes to the end of her life .
21 Today 's announcement comes at the end of what had been a successful decade for the Trust .
22 But our real kick came at the end of the film when the lights went up .
23 MOVING INTO ITS purpose-built building at Florrenes Air Base , Belgium , at the end of July was Spitfire FR.XIV RM921/SG–57. coming to the end of a restoration programme that was started in 1986 , the fighter wears the colours and markings of Col Avi R A Lallemant , commanding Officer of 609 Sqn in 1944 .
24 The course for the MA ( Honours ) in History falls into two parts , with the division coming at the end of the second year .
25 The trouble came at the end of a six-hour hearing at the Liverpool Magistrates ' Court yesterday which followed arrests in the Kirkdake area on Wednesday .
26 Perhaps the most poignant echo in the tale comes towards the end where the townspeople , laughing at John , " " kiken and … cape " " , " peer and gape " , into his roof ( 3841 ) , repeating the verb used of Nicholas pretending to be transfixed by his astrological vision ( 3444 ) : the " " folk " " here align themselves with Nicholas — and with Nicholas the trickster , not Nicholas of the branded bum .
27 Ironically , the most noticeable example comes at the end of scene ten , when Broadbent admits that Anderson 's advice on the Czech team 's tactics has proved depressingly sound : Anderson 's laconic replies implicate his loss of interest in the topic , following scene six , even now that Broadbent actually shows interest in what he had said earlier and allocates a turn to him twice .
28 The only account of William Green 's life came at the end of the 19th century and was written by Charles Roeder .
29 Erm , they give a complex number of cues , erm , when they are about to finish their conversation , erm , I how did they manage to it 's shown , it shown through the gaze of the speaker erm , erm , the speaker coming to the end of long actions has been shown to gaze heavily at the listener .
30 For this purpose the type of interview was particularly suitable , with accounts of present-day life coming towards the end of a now intimate interview .
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