Example sentences of "[vb mod] come [prep] this [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Berry , an experienced judge of sprinters , rates her Listed class she finished third in that grade at Haydock in April and Lucky Parkes should come through this test . |
2 | Berry , an experienced judge of sprinters , rates her Listed class she finished third in that grade at Haydock in April and Lucky Parkes should come through this test . |
3 | the first one I do n't think should come under this grant , I think it should go to enhancement . |
4 | ‘ You should come into this house with us . ’ |
5 | He should come to this House to make a statement . |
6 | It is easy to see why a girl might come to this conclusion . |
7 | In Edinburgh at the time , there were various schools which might come under this heading , including the Merchant Company schools which provided a good education originally for children of humble backgrounds , but increasingly for middle-class children . |
8 | We suggested a time of quiet , to catch any ideas that might come from this Source . |
9 | then they 'll come on this morning , if you have half a pint of beer you 're over the odds , you 'll be pinched . |
10 | Hoping that by August next year , something 'll come of this photography and I can walk straight into a maybe go to a college or if that is n't on the cards , into some sort of a technical lab or something . |
11 | I think he 'll come round this way . |
12 | Swarf thought he could come to this world , steal the treasures of another race and escape with immortality and immeasurable riches . |
13 | The change , which could come in this autumn , follows the scrapping of the controversial unit fines system , which led to public outrage after a number of cases where huge fines were imposed for trivial offences . |
14 | so in all purp in , in always , the fact that you 'd come into this house made one realize that there 'd been a distinct change in one 's circumstances . |
15 | When we got the vans , Ernie was with us then and he always used to sharpen her knife up so as he 'd give her a fresh one lunchtime to go , he 'd , she 'd start off up , down from where you 'd come from this morning , then she 'd go on to Wicken and do that on a Tuesday , Tuesday round . |
16 | Aye , there was er a Billy , a Harry , and er there was another lot come , I c I just ca n't remember their name but after the First World War this Billy used to come round this part and collect cast horses . |
17 | we never used to come in this room you know , nobody would come in this room |
18 | We shall come across this concern again in 1922 when we travel through the much stronger industrial nexus of Kharkov . |
19 | The khthons had known that the Earth colonists would one day re-awaken the Elder Gods ; they would come to this planet and open the gates of their imprisonment . |
20 | An undertaker on the mainland and then the remains would come on this boat . |
21 | I spoke to him , on the phone , and he said he would come in this morning . |
22 | we never used to come in this room you know , nobody would come in this room |
23 | Clearly , a sum paid to the settlor to discharge a liability of his to the bank would come within this section ( see IRC v Bates ( 1966 ) 44 TC 225 : the case of Potts ' Executors v IRC [ 1951 ] AC 43 held that a payment to a third party was not a sum paid to the settlor but that case is no longer good law in view of TA 1988 , s677(10) which was inserted into the former TA 1970 , s451 ( now TA 1988 , s677 ) by s42(7) of FA 1981 ) . |
24 | Deaf children of deaf parents using sign at home may come under this rule ; like ethnic minority children they must then be assessed in their native language prior to any Statement or placement . |
25 | Many people grow up frightened of what may come after this life because their minds have been filled since childhood with ideas of hell and damnation , judgment and punishment . |
26 | The pursuance of damages through car hire schemes was held not to be champertous by the House of Lords in Sanders v Templar ( Times Law Reports , 13 January 1993 ) and an increasing percentage of personal injury claims relating to motor accidents will come through this source in the future . |
27 | It seems unlikely that anything much will come of this discontent — there will always be some students eager to defend an institution that in most universities contributes up to £100,000 to charity each year . |
28 | ‘ People will come to this picture to see you , sweetheart . |
29 | I can not tell what will come from this day 's work . ’ |
30 | At the time of writing we have yet to see what new drugs will come from this foundation . |