Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] come to [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Since the ability to draw is not seen as particularly important , this state of affairs has not come to the fore . |
2 | One might point out that this morning he issued to the press a 20-page document which he still has not come to the House to answer for . |
3 | I am sorry that I so rattled the Prime Minister with my question at the previous Prime Minister 's Question Time that he has not come to the House today . |
4 | A brilliant student 's seven-year battle for compensation after being crippled for life , has finally come to an end with a record award of £1.2 million . |
5 | After Danny de Vito showed his skills as a director in Wars of the Roses he used his leverage with the money-men to bankroll a long-cherished project which has finally come to the screen as Hoffa . |
6 | Dominic Dromgoole , of the excellent Bush Theatre ; Julia Bardsley , co-director of the Leicester Haymarket , and Phyllida Lloyd , whose superb production of The Virtuoso at Stratford has just come to the Barbican , are just a few of the other names I could have included . |
7 | As this issue of The Lifeboat goes to press the 16th International Lifeboat Conference has just come to an end in Oslo . |
8 | However , a call to the Institute 's members ' registrar will confirm whether a firm of a similar name exists , or whether it is a case of ‘ misrepresentation ’ that has already come to the Institute 's attention . |
9 | His competitive streak has always come to the fore in head-to-head situations , such as the World Match Play and the Ryder Cup . |
10 | Even after your job has clearly come to an end , you need to beware of breaking obligations that remain legally binding upon you , such as the duty not to disclose trade secrets . |
11 | The age of those mighty , entrepreneurial artistic directors has probably come to an end . |
12 | West Germany : ‘ the nuclear construction programme of the German utilities has practically come to an end for the time being . ’ |
13 | Gervase Jackson-Stops has also come to the aid of Stowe , with An English Arcadia 1600 – 1990 , an exhibition of designs and watercolours of gardens in the care of the National Trust which opens in the USA next year . |
14 | It began very early in September and has really come to an end today with the last of the leaves falling overnight and the first serious snow on the mountains . |
15 | If that was the case , the Hove , Sussex-based company has now come to the boardroom 's attention , and it , together with sister software company Shortlands Computing Services Ltd , has been sold to Datapro Computers Ltd of nearby Horsham . |
16 | If that was the case , well the Hove , Sussex-based company has now come to the boardroom 's attention , and it , together with sister software company Shortlands Computing Services Ltd , has been sold to Datapro Computers Ltd of nearby Horsham . |
17 | To this must be added the 157,000 temporary houses ( the provision of temporary houses has now come to an end ) , the repair of war-damaged property , and the use of huts and service camps . |
18 | We are pleased that a dispute in which the current management of pergamon Press has played no part has now come to an end . |
19 | Anglo-Saxon archaeology has n't come to a crisis point as did prehistoric studies in the early 1960s ; rather it is gradually slipping into new directions with the establishment of a generation of archaeologists more aware that alternative approaches exist to be tried and which have been available for 20 years . |
20 | My friends have also made it difficult for me , but the world has n't come to an end . ’ |
21 | Now , the boot room has again come to the rescue . |
22 | However , no new phyla have appeared since the Cambrian period , some 500 million years ago , hinting , as Gordon Rattray Taylor once pointed out , that perhaps evolution has actually come to a halt . |
23 | ‘ You 'd better come to the flat with me for a start , as soon as the warrant arrives . |
24 | The normal rule in such circumstances is for the convictions to be set aside : ‘ no reasonable jury who had applied their mind properly to the facts in the case could have arrived at the conclusion , and once one assumes that they are an unreasonable jury , or they could not have reasonably come to the conclusion , then the convictions can not stand . ’ |
25 | It 's twenty to twelve , erm Y D P just really erm having now come to an end . |
26 | Well , that was when it had all come to a head . |
27 | Just as they approached the doors , he stopped as if he had suddenly come to a decision . |
28 | The uncle had apparently come to the school gates at the end of school and when the girl was a little way on her way home had caught up with her and taken her to his house . |
29 | I had already come to the conclusion that regression therapy would probably be the best way to help Maxine , and I put the idea to her . |
30 | Cards and flowers had already come to the stage door , and Bernie was making mocking remarks at every opportunity . |