Example sentences of "[adj] come [adv prt] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Unless the Government is prepared to come up with some cash there is a real danger that the Dearing vision will be blinded by the dust which the report is rapidly gathering .
2 At a meeting this May the Agricultural Ministers agreed that reform was necessary and gave each other a deadline of June 1993 to come up with concrete proposals .
3 Just to prove that the Slovenians do not have a monopoly on canoeing competition labels on alcoholic drinks , the French came up with this pleasant number .
4 This came about on 18 December , when Mr. Mason accepted the post of Assistant Manager and Engineer to the three companies .
5 This came out with more bravado than Sally-Anne really felt , and had she seen him more clearly before she intervened she might not have said anything at all .
6 This came out without any warning , so I answered , with fake innocence : ‘ Talk about what ? ’
7 How does all this come out in actual figures ?
8 All of this comes down to one simple phrase : working more efficiently so we can do more and do it better .
9 This comes out in this page we 'll have a look at it in more detail in a minute .
10 This comes about in two ways .
11 Though this comes in for constant robust internal criticism and revision , it is more thorough than that of many professional advice and counselling organizations and is increasingly used as a model by other organizations .
12 something , something very odd came out of that , this Ann said something I thought what ?
13 For this reason it is impossible to come up with universal rules dictating how explanations are to be provided .
14 " The autumn gales 'll be on us in a few weeks , and the volunteers wo n't be so easy to come by after that . "
15 But if manufacturers were to try too hard to come up with new ideas we 'd be constantly faced with designs to rival Gibson 's semi-mythical Moderne and Burns ' Flyte in the grossness stakes .
16 However , we believe that those who are determined to understand a phenomenon and to follow their research and their intuition wherever they may lead , are on the balance of probabilities , perhaps more likely to come up with new knowledge than those who are trying to solve a narrowly defined problem or to develop a product .
17 Both Soviet and foreign estimates of the numbers threatened with starvation and death over the period 1921–2 varied enormously , and no amount of detailed research is ever likely to come up with reliable figures .
18 In Britain we are likely to come up against similar , if not identical , perverse incentives as the NHS reforms alter the way in which services are funded .
19 Looking to the future , she warned that 1993 looked set to be a tougher year than last , ‘ Education funding in the UK looks less secure than in 1992 , and there are no major World Bank projects likely to come through in 1993 .
20 Breathlessly , Jenny poured out the news that the rear offside wheel of Miss Clinton 's car was loose , likely to come off at any moment , sooner or later certain to come off .
21 You 're supposed to come back by any reasonable route — but reasonable is not defined .
22 Bloke supposed to come in for new business pitch will have got there by now .
23 All three came in with two under par rounds of 73 over the Royal Lytham and St Annes on a day when only eight players bettered a demanding par .
24 These came up in some numbers right from the beginning to the end of this strip .
25 Unsolicited enquiries are dealt with by telephone and post ; sometimes these come in via other departments .
26 Three comes out in British .
27 This can be decomposed as : where X 1 and X 2 are the proportion in the service class and intermediate class ( 0.134 and 0.308 ) respectively : 0.237 + ( 0.134 × 0.482 ) + ( 0.308 × 0.160 ) = 0.351 We shall consider equations like this for interval level variables later in the book ; you may find it useful to come back to this paragraph after you have read chapter 10 .
28 Expecting little good to come out of any country even partially populated by non-Muslims , Ibn Battuta had few expectations of India .
29 They also adopted a different approach to that adopted by Lyell J , but they all came up with more or less the same figure at the end of the day , around £54,000 .
30 Niall Hammond , of the Bowes Museum , said the three trenches they dug all came up against Victorian foundations of a disused cellar .
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