Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [verb] to terms [prep] " in BNC.

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1 That dominance is now being challenged as PC manufacturers slowly come to terms with the potential market for desktop publishing .
2 And while the book is largely about success , Andy bravely comes to terms with his feelings of doubt as he turns his back on the 1989 Makalu expedition .
3 ONE OF two sprawling films ( Heimat being the other ) that marked Germany finally coming to terms with the war , relatively free of guilt .
4 So it was that the companies gradually came to terms with the increasing traffic and provided it with a further impetus .
5 Birds are somewhat stupid creatures and have a hard enough job even coming to terms with the ordinary , let alone the extraordinary .
6 It is a delightful place to stroll through , as it is sufficiently small ( with a population of under 5,000 ) for a visitor readily to come to terms with its layout .
7 This is a vulnerable moment in our lives and the way the funeral and its aftermath are handled can affect how people subsequently come to terms with their bereavement .
8 Last season Neath never came to terms with the loss of Rowland Phillips and Mark Jones to rugby league , and this season they have done no better in this regard ; the back row , once the fulcrum of the entire Neath effort , has no longer been an area of strength .
9 However , the parents of 12-year-old victim Tim Parry — hanging on to life by a thread in a Liverpool hospital yesterday came to terms with the fact that he is unlikely to survive .
10 Both of us need a few moments alone to come to terms with things .
11 75 What neither the men nor the resisting women ever came to terms with was the completely new skill represented by monotyping .
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