Example sentences of "[modal v] come [adv] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 You should come here on a Friday or Saturday night .
2 We therefore feel it is absolutely vital that if there is to be a new settlement , it should come forward through the structure plan .
3 I believe the government should come up with the money outstanding from our pension funds , and then try to recover it themselves .
4 The ice should come well up the sides .
5 Well I , I 've been on to world wom women 's committee and they assure me that they , the hospital says these tests should come through in a week , at the most three week 's , but you can phone them , so that certainly has improved , there does n't seem to be a back log .
6 In later recensions Hymes adds other features , for example key ( which involves evaluation — was it a good sermon , a pathetic explanation , etc. ) , and purpose ( what did the participants intend should come about as a result of the communicative event ) .
7 We 're quite fortunate because there will be four chief superintendents at that meeting to discuss whether or not the S L O's should come back to the centre .
8 Under this it must come forward with a Plan of Operations that shows how quarrying can take place in a way that minimises environmental damage and nuisance .
9 If we want to use up most of our ration of luck in our theory of the origin of intelligence , then we have n't much left over to spend on our theory of the origin of life : we must come up with a theory that makes the origin of life almost inevitable .
10 ‘ If my brother Reg wants to buy them he must come up with the money , but there are a number of interested parties , individuals and consortiums who have expressed a desire to take over the club . ’
11 It calls on all the agencies responsible for their care to join together to tackle the problem — and says the Government must come up with the cash that 's needed .
12 ‘ You must come up in the fall ; it 's beautiful .
13 I insisted that the Unit must be responsible for its own training and operational planning and that , therefore , the Commander of the Unit must come directly under the C in C. I emphasised how fatal it would be for the proposed unit to be put under any existing branch or formation for administration .
14 ‘ The other must come down from the Ridgery . ’
15 ‘ I think , ’ she went on , ‘ now that we have more than half the land — and most of the best part — you must come out into the open .
16 ‘ You must come out of the sun , Mr Gray , ’ said Lord Henry .
17 Fear slowed his thoughts , and grudgingly granted him one consolation : at this speed they must come out at the bottom a damn sight faster than they went through at the top .
18 First , however , we must come back to the question of how to read a contingency table when one variable can be considered a cause of the other .
19 Breasal will show you where to go , and then you must come back to the hall .
20 ‘ You must come back to the house — calamine lotion is the thing , I believe .
21 I I think I must come back with the fact that I have n't denied we made made a mistake .
22 Civil and Public Services Association chief Barry Reamsbottom told the unions ' Blackpool conference : ‘ We 're stuck in a time-warp and must come in from the cold . ’
23 Okay , so they 've other P H I benefit , that must come off of the equation , because we , otherwise we 'll be paying it as well as another insurance company , which mean he 'll be better off financially , by being off work sick , yes .
24 Not only would I lose a valued client but her collection might come on to the market , her reasons for selling would become known , Durances all over the world would become suspect and lose their value and dealers would suffer .
25 Next time it might come down over the centre of a large city . ’
26 It 's all right , sweetie , I 'm not coming back with a bone through my nose , but I might come back with a bit less of a bone in my head .
27 I tell you what , I might come back in an hour when the fireworks start .
28 IF BILL CLINTON were to look to Florida for advice on how to pass a health-care bill , the answer might come back in the words of Lyndon Johnson : better to have your enemies inside your tent pissing out , than outside pissing in .
29 Neville Chamberlain , often regarded as the architect of the National Government , confessed , in July 1931 , ‘ I myself hate the idea and hope it wo n't come to pass ’ ; nevertheless , he admitted that a National Government might come about as a result of the financial crisis .
30 ‘ In the hands of any other writer and actor , Ferdinand might come across as a prig and a phoney , ’ she wrote .
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