Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] have come a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | One-room living has come a long way from the old bed-sitter image with its general note of poverty and desperation . |
2 | Surprisingly , out of this mish-mash has come a positive development , in which the public sector institutions are giving the idea of ‘ an academic community ’ a completely new reality . |
3 | The Social Democrats have come a long way since the early 1980s when , newly tossed into opposition , the party was crippled by defeatism . |
4 | But this is exactly what we might have expected : with the emergence of the black British identity has come a matching linguistic persona , neither London nor Jamaican , but " London Jamaican " . |
5 | With this decline in spiritual and political influence has come an economic slide . |
6 | Contemporary psychology has come a long way from the time when J. B. Watson , the first behaviourist , forbade the consideration of non-observable entities . |
7 | The humble fryer has come a long way since the days when it was little more than a heating element and a thermostat . |
8 | Of course photographic techniques HAVE come a long way since Ponting 's day . |
9 | That newspapers had come a long way in the interim period was beyond doubt ; that they were to travel even further was to be confirmed by the manner in which the Cadburys disposed of the News Chronicle in 1960 . |
10 | But the industrial robot has come a long way since the early sixties when Joe Engelberger set up Unimation , the world 's first industrial robot making company . |
11 | Western Europe had come a long way since 1945 . |
12 | So both groups had come a similar distance in the sense of having the indications that there was something interesting to pursue further . |