Example sentences of "[noun sg] come [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The second point is that of course as we accept into the role of opposition indeed to give these alternative proposals , give this particulary case to come within the government guidelines .
2 Regional council allocations for 1993-94 , excluding the money to come from the EC , will vary from £13.6 million in Borders Region to almost £209 million in Strathclyde .
3 ‘ I 'd have liked Naylor to come into the firm , ’ Guthrie answered for him .
4 My hon. Friend is right to draw attention to the fact that the further substantial increase in the NHS 's capital budget in the next financial year has made it possible for the health authority and the Ministry of Defence to come to an agreement on that issue .
5 Nevertheless , this sentence has the effect of making the click come before the shutting , thus reversing the normal precedence of cause to effect .
6 Mr Takeshita wants that election to come after the Paris economic summit in mid-July , hoping that the voters will be impressed with his statesmanlike performance in dealing with the Latin debt crisis .
7 Once she 'd made her decision to come to the Dordogne , Sabine had read up as much as possible on the area , and she knew that Bergerac wines had been overshadowed in the past by the great vignobles of Bordeaux .
8 ‘ I made the decision to come into the business to please my father when he was dying .
9 It may be difficult deciding when sentences of this kind come to an end — in some cases , several dozen clauses might be linked by and or other devices , lasting several minutes — but , it is unusual to find a problem understanding what is being said .
10 In the most emotional speech of the day , Mr Alexander Rutskoy , the Vice-President , appealed for parliament to come to the aid of the Russian minority in the TransDniestr region of Moldova , the scene of bitter fighting in recent months .
11 Two problems are thus solved at once : it becomes clear that terminology does not refer only to grammar , and the reasons for the terminology come before the terminology itself .
12 Those taking part come from a variety of backgrounds and have spent several months or in some cases years receiving instruction in the faith , usually as part of a parish group .
13 The greater part come from the area around the Black Sea , concentrating especially on the Urartian Empire ; relations between the Greeks and the Thracians and Scythians ; and the art of Sarmatia .
14 And I have seen them at the mid-day rest hour of twelve to one , I have seen a ploughman come into the stable , shake up the straw in the stall of his leading beast and lie down there and sleep .
15 Never had Berret come across a case with so many promising openings that led nowhere .
16 Only when they captured last season 's Royal Liver League crown did prospects of All Ireland glory come into the equation .
17 Because of the distance of my journey I had been given permission to come during the morning , and there were no other visitors .
18 Mention a low cost tank and all the issues of new or salvaged glass , glass thickness , and quality of build come to the fore .
19 Strong , virile performances of two of the finest of all Tudor settings of the Mass come from the choir of St John 's College Cambridge on a label not normally associated with early music , mid-price EMI Eminence .
20 No scene , perhaps , in The Lord of the Rings is more moving or more suggestive than the one in which Sam and Frodo , in Mordor , see the wind changing and the darkness driven back , and then as if in answer to prayer come upon a trickle of water : ‘ ill-fated ’ and ‘ fruitless ’ in appearance , but at that moment seemingly a message from the world outside , beyond the Shadow .
21 Obviously , having two amps means you 'll hear yourself better on stage , but I would have thought that a performer would prefer actual monitoring or foldback to come from a PA source ( ie. what the audience is hearing ) rather than a backline source .
22 While the characters flirt with each other in improbable configurations , love , marriage and money come under the microscope .
23 Most reforming governments are using one or more of the three principles that underlie the reorganisation of Britain 's national health service ( NHS ) : separating buyers of care from providers of care ; forcing the providers to compete for contracts from buyers ; and making money come with the patient .
24 If the EEC did wish to go beyond the 1962 agreement on agriculture , the arrangements of which were in any case due to expire in 1965 , if financing was permitted to come from the EEC 's own resources , and if the latter were to be levied on imports , then it was sensible for the EEC budget to come under the control of the European Parliament .
25 However , your willingness to come to the aid of your fellow readers is causing a few headaches in our office .
26 This Act amended the 1944 legislation which had divided schooling at age 11 between primary and secondary , by allowing the break to come between the ages of 10 and 12 , to cover the development of middle schools .
27 The backswing can be compared to chopping down a tree with and axe ; power and speed come from the distance the axe is swung back .
28 The Queen 's Bench and Chancery Divisions are no longer distinct courts , though , as a matter of working convenience , matters which involve mainly the Common Law come before the Queen 's Bench ; those which largely involve Equity come before the Chancery Division .
29 She had also heard a car come up the drive , and was heading through the hall to the porch .
30 ‘ I saw the car come up the drive and then turn towards the Rectory .
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