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

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1 I mean the the stuff 's due to come in on Friday , he reckons it 'll get it 's the fourth on Friday is n't it ?
2 I hope I 'm right to come back to Benedict 's .
3 So many houses have been burgled here and old people are afraid to come out at night .
4 ‘ And they were able to do that because DEA Nicosia used the Eurame office as a waiting room for unscreened Lebanese coming in from Beirut .
5 MacLachlan , victor of eight combats over the island , was fortunate to come down on Malta itself , rather than in the sea : ‘ For what seemed like hours I hung there , apparently motionless , with Malta still as far away as ever .
6 ‘ We found it was very easy to come up with agreements that said nothing , but would impress the folks back home and the media , ’ said Mr Goodwin .
7 Replacements for your plantation wo n't be so easy to come by in future . "
8 With this background of ‘ westernisation ’ it was considered natural to come over to England to complete my education .
9 For which of these excursions was he in the company of Yeats ? presumably from the Pound papers now at New Haven it would not be hard to come up with answers to these questions .
10 He was unfortunate to come up against West Indies , playing four fast bowlers for the first time , when he was still an inexperienced leader and the memory of Lillee and Thomson was still raw .
11 Novell Inc 's BrainShare ‘ 93 get-together in Utah , March 22 to 26 , is promising to come up with answers to questions like ‘ Can Microsoft Corp NT and NetWare co-exist ? ’
12 Novell Inc 's BrainShare ‘ 93 get-together in Utah March 22–26 is promising to come up with answers to questions like ‘ Can Microsoft Corp NT and NetWare co-exist ? ’
13 I had n't been quick to come around to Caduta , as you know .
14 Clare thought Caro did n't look fit to come out of hospital .
15 They may speak to Members of Parliament and Ministers on a confidential basis , but it is very unusual to come out in terms of that kind and say that sort of thing .
16 As everyone knows , the boundary commission , which decides how many constituencies an area needs , is likely to come up with recommendations that will deprive Labour of as many as 20 of its urban seats at the next election .
17 If you are shooting video in a zoo where animals are kept behind bars , you are likely to come up against situations which prove that auto-focus systems are not quite as clever as you are .
18 You 're supposed to come on to parade with clean boots , Jones ! ( condition 3 )
19 I think I 'll put on a jumper today , or a pullover it 'll be cold coming out of John 's tonight .
20 She dare n't become pregnant , so he had to make sure to come out in time .
21 The present Prime Minister would be unable to come out of No. 10 Downing street and say , ’ We are standing by the constitution of the USSR and we condemn the coup as unconstitutional . ’
22 ‘ Soon be able to come up for air . ’
23 The main problem has been we have n't been able to come up to EC standards .
24 Even if no one is around who can confirm a particular incident , if you are able to come up with details of surroundings and personalities of which you had no conscious memory , and if these are later proved to have been accurate , there is no real reason to suppose that a significant event was simply a figment of an over-active imagination .
25 I think that there is hope and expectation on the part of us all that we shall be able to come back into talks after the general election .
26 We made the decision to go despite the lack of an organized UK presence — we are on-air with a new series running from January to March 1991 and we wanted to make contacts before then , rather than wait for MIP-TV to come around in April .
27 ‘ It was important to come back after Saturday , and we always want to win at home .
28 My parents were quite happy to come back to London and stay with me instead !
29 After all , ’ he continued , deftly manipulating half a loaf of garlic bread to sop up the tomato juice on his last platter , ‘ you never saw anybody fat come out of Auschwitz . ’
30 Oh I 'm sure it would mean an awful lot to them and the fact that you 're so successful coming out of Ireland would mean a lot to them as well you know and er er it 's nice to be able to er you know to do that for them if they 've been over here living for you know some of them have never been back maybe and some of them have never seen Ireland because maybe their their parents or their grandparents came from there .
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