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

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1 Although directors and officers ' liability insurance has been available in the UK since the 1930s , it has only come into wide use in the last few years .
2 Somebody had obviously come into some money .
3 It is a deliberately confused image which works in close-up but only comes into real focus when viewed from far back .
4 Pronethalol had only just come into clinical use when it was found to produce tumours in mice .
5 Bacon , however , soon came into financial difficulties and he tried to foil a £90 debt owed to a local stonemason by forging a receipt .
6 Anderton said yesterday : ‘ I was just coming into some form when I had to have my operation .
7 Non-pelagic species , which do not normally come into direct contact with ice , appear to avoid freezing simply by supercooling ; their fluids remain ice-free even 1–2°C below freezing point .
8 But they are gradually coming into grammatical focus .
9 Nevertheless , heroin is still coming into this country at an increasing rate , and something must be done to control it .
10 I do n't ever come into this Birmingham Midlands region at all , so I object to everyone saying circuses are cruel and generalizing
11 Much has been written about the ‘ new technology ’ methods currently being introduced throughout the newspaper and magazine industry but few individuals ever come into actual contact with the equipment and working methods they use , we merely read the end results at our breakfast table .
12 I hardly ever come into this room , and I am most particular .
13 An occasional treat or privilege for a child who has made a big effort to master a new skill or managed to give up a bad habit hardly comes into that category .
14 Cocaine usually comes into this country in the form of cocaine hydrochloride .
15 During this time he introduced cast-iron brake blocks of the type which later came into general use .
16 Over the years he invented many improvements for Watt 's steam engines , including a D-shaped sliding valve which later came into common use for many types of steam engine .
17 Metal studded watch straps , sharpened coins , Kung Fu stars with the edges filed down , also came into this category .
18 Their faith — the couple both came into full communion with the Church in later life — helped them see that they had not ‘ lost ’ Benedict , but ‘ handed him over . ’
19 We hear a PowerOpen consortium is in bud and will probably come into full flower in the fall : petals include Bull , IBM , Apple , Motorola and Thomson at least .
20 The buildings with mosaics at Bath , if domestic , may also come into this category .
21 Children who are too young to understand explanations of their situation , or those who may suffer from learning difficulties understandably come into this category .
22 So what about sanitary towels and tampons : bleached products that also come into intimate contact with the human body ?
23 Some of the performances also come into sharper definition before the camera .
24 While many of the 7/6d were firsts , some of the 3/6d issues also come into this category , and to make matters worse even some of the smaller red-backed 2/ [ 10p ] editions with the designed covers were firsts . ’
25 This is the paradox that the very theory which seeks to unveil these hidden realities underlying human society also comes into direct collision with them , or rather with the repressing forces which safeguard them in the unconscious of each one of us .
26 The British Olympic yachting team , which a week ago was an unknown quantity , has now come into sharper focus with three representatives chosen , and others emerging .
27 Nevertheless , rubber studs did not immediately come into general use because the process of changing them ruined the soles of the boots .
28 Delivering a gift to Zen 's mother did n't quite come into that category , but it was better than nothing .
29 Finally , Portes suggests that in the struggle , the groups rarely come into direct confrontation with the dominant class , but usually with members of the bureaucratic-technical class who staff the agencies of the state ( Portes 1985 ) .
30 It is the second role which has recently come into greater prominence .
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