Example sentences of "[noun] comes [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ( The word booze comes from the same source . )
2 The level flight attitude will be achieved as the Altimeter comes onto the required height , and speed onto the required figure .
3 His pleasure comes from a different source : ‘ I am obviously very conscious of what my forebears achieved and therefore it matters to me that the business has survived , remained independent and has grown . ’
4 Again , the term comes from the earliest attempts at explaining the disorder .
5 Part of the confidence surrounding the 19 DX comes from the very fact that it is turbocharged .
6 The next thing is that when the vote comes to the General Secretary for the union , anyone who 's been out of the particular industry for longer than eighteen months wo n't be able to vote .
7 Evidence of religious aspects comes from a sculptured relief of a hunter god , of which Professor J. M. C. Toynbee has written : ‘ even in its mutilated state , ( it ) is one of the most satisfying extant pieces of Romano-British sculpture known to us ’ , though it consists only of the torso .
8 The echo comes from the whole disc , but because of this uniqueness the echo can be unscrambled to reveal the contributions to it from every pair of patches of planetary surface exemplified by X and Y.
9 The funding for this and the downtown programme comes from the fiftieth anniversary campaign , launched in 1988 by the museum 's board of trustees .
10 When Shaw died in 1950 he was a very rich man — the net value of his estate was eventually assessed at around £6,250,000 in terms of today 's money ; and the closest Holroyd comes to a sustained narrative is in tracing the fate of his various bequests .
11 This holds even though much of the money for welfare programmes such as AFDC comes from the Federal exchequer ; the larger the average payment , above a Federally-prescribed minimum , the larger the proportion of it which has to be met from State revenues , so that generous State governments are taxing their own residents in order to support their generosity ( see Tresch , 1975 ) .
12 The only light comes from a metre-wide strip of sky fifty feet above , and the little that falls through the arch at the end .
13 As fluorescent light comes from a larger area the light is more diffuse and therefore produces less glare , and the flickering that was associated with the early form of fluorescent lighting should not be experienced now .
14 The power for the spring comes from the back legs and feet .
15 Saffron yellow comes from the dried pistils of the saffron crocus , but this plant is now extremely rare and the colour is exceptionally expensive .
16 But the twist is who will be the one to die for the rest and the storyline comes from a real incident .
17 The disadvantage comes from the potential neglect of 98 per cent of NHS managers who do not join one of the accelerated programmes .
18 No one knows exactly how many eligible people there are , because the last firm data comes from the 1981 census ; there have been extrapolations from those figures , but inevitably there is an element of guesswork .
19 The information which appears on Skymaster comes from the same computers at Heathrow which churn out the printed stuff so you can guarantee that the data is accurate and changes reach you faster than they normally would on the paper system .
20 Now half the income of the city 's administration comes from the federal government .
21 The real follow-up comes in the New Year , but meanwhile Incesticide collects together sundry B-sides , live cuts and overmatter , mostly recorded before Nevermind .
22 A health issue comes to the fore Sunday .
23 When FDA clearance comes through the final product in a portfolio of basic food ingredients will be in place — promising the transformation of what has long been regarded as one of Britain 's most boring businesses into a world beater .
24 The primary impetus , on the other hand , for cash accounting in the business sector comes from the undoubted subjectivity of accruals accounting .
25 The word metaphor comes from the Greek metaphorá , which means transference or ‘ to carry over ’ .
26 Consider the following : ( 1 ) The clothing comes in a fixed number of style and colours ( if you can stretch to calling sludge brown a colour ) , and surely even the most puritanical will lust for something new after a while .
27 Professor Goodship has also found that in extended trot , the suspensory ligament comes under a high loading stress and this may help to explain the high incidence of suspensory ligament injuries in trotters .
28 The plan comes from the powerful Association of Metropolitan Authorities with the aim of cutting road accidents .
29 Since it 's breakfast , you are mercifully spared ordering salad , because salad comes with a metronomically-recited choice of dressing : ‘ Sir , we have Thousand Island , we have vy-nay-grette , we have blue cheese … ’
30 Given the tension here was one of humiliation , that can be sufficient in itself to sustain the momentum , especially as this workhouse scene comes at a critical point in the sequence structure — for they have already in an earlier lesson experienced the well-intentioned caring of the ‘ lady ’ who housed these girls out of pity but was obliged to hand them over to the authorities .
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