Example sentences of "[pers pn] has come [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 She has come into the Chamber in the past five minutes .
2 How far he has come since the days in Harry Fischer 's office above the tobacconist 's , with the cosy office jokes and the lunch time beers in the pub !
3 He has come under the microscope of German giants Bayern Munich and is clearly a man the Crues will have to watch carefully as well .
4 I think he has come to a rendezvous .
5 The nearest he has come to an England place since was three years ago when he broke a thumb within 24 hours of being selected to face India .
6 At length , the passage he has been stooping along opens out somewhat into a low chamber : he has come to the shrine of a goddess .
7 By the time he arrives in front of Ronald , he has come to the boil and the pate is registering off the scale of visible light .
8 ‘ 3(1) Any assumption by a person of the rights of an owner amounts to an appropriation , and this includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner .
9 ‘ 3(1) Any assumption by a person of the rights of an owner amounts to an appropriation , and this includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner .
10 This result is probably implicit in the concept of appropriation ( or ‘ conversion ’ ) ; but it is made explicit by the provision in clause 3(1) that a person 's assumption of the rights of an owner ‘ includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner . ’
11 He has come by the property without stealing it and has later assumed a right to it by keeping it .
12 The Foreign Office Minister , Mr William Waldegrave , said : ‘ The message we must get across is that those in the security services , those working for the state , should recognise that a day of reckoning will come for them as it has come for the East Germans and others . ’
13 And why , when it has come to the crunch , have British governments of all political persuasions given it such unswerving support ?
14 ‘ I have been lucky when it has come to the crunch but in life you make your own luck .
15 The farming lobby has also pursued a policy of agricultural exceptionalism when it has come to the institution of a wide range of welfare and safety measures .
16 It has come to the attention of the IBOA that there may be pressure put on members to accept a Voluntary Redundancy or Early Retirement Package in the near future .
17 It is not so , except perhaps in the most formal of speaking styles , where a sentence may fall to a low point in the voice and be followed by a substantial silence , and we know that it has come to an end .
18 I think that Yugoslavia as we know it has come to an end .
19 Ray Fell , chairman of the Leeds United Supporters ' Club said : ‘ It has come as a kick in the stomach . ’
20 It has come as a shock to realise that your magazine can no longer be relied on to present the relevant information in a straightforward factual manner .
21 It has come from the Foundation for Sport and the Arts , and will be used to buy sets of SportsHall equipment for all eight counties .
22 Wind also has a profound effect on plant growth in the Western Isles in that is usually salt-laden , particularly when it has come from the west or south-west , having passed over long distances of wave-tom ocean .
23 Support for it has come from the observation that both the brain and the conventional digital computer ( i.e. the one hard-wired only for its machine code ) seem to be surprisingly homogeneous in their internal structure , which led to remarks like Newell 's ( 1973 ) ‘ … intelligent behaviour demands only a few very general features in the underlying mechanism ’ .
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