Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] come [adv prt] of " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Some harsh , agonised sounds must have come out of him .
2 They must have come out of a back entrance to the flats and they were intent on avoiding somebody , although I 'd seen nothing suspicious when I 'd cruised down Seymour Place .
3 All I would say , Jerry , is that it 'll have to come out of something like our carry forwards for this .
4 He came back readily when his name was spoken ; they saw him not tools-in-hand in his lodge under the church , nor frowning thoughtfully over his tracing tables , but naked to the waist and brown in the harvest-fields , swinging a sickle instead of a mallet , a slender young fellow with grass seeds in his tangle of dark hair , who might have come out of any cottage in the hamlet .
5 Westward had recently been the scene of a public boardroom row that could have come out of a TV series .
6 Gradually , though , as the rest of the column led by his uncle on a fine white horse arrived , the survivors who could walk came out of the banqueting hall and allowed themselves to be greeted by the relieving troops .
7 If he had been there , he would have come out of it with his lustre still upon him , and his crest as high as ever .
8 The Ministry of Defence objected on three grounds : the increase in nuclear missiles available to the West was operationally unnecessary and would only add to the existing nuclear overkill ; mixed manning was a formula for military disaster ; and the cost of the British share would have to come out of the already overstretched Defence budget .
9 That would have to , that would have to come out of any kind of interview with workers in those other groups really .
10 So I mean it it was it was represented to me er and I felt that there was some logic in it that that this company would not be discussing this deal unless it felt it could make money out of it and that money in the end would have to come out of the local people here .
11 Indeed the reference to Sappho in the last stanza may seem to come out of nowhere ’ [ Landry , 84 ] .
12 ‘ One has gained a certain amount of experience that one did n't have before and I think we will have come out of it stronger .
13 If you received any perks with your job , such as a company car or health insurance , then unless you have a very generous employer these will have to come out of your own pocket in future .
14 Yet its more forward-thinking apparatchiks and diplomats know that , to be a truly great power , China will have to come out of its cocoon .
15 A diminishing few of us will continue to come out of sheer love but many will not , especially the young .
  Next page