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

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1 ( The word booze comes from the same source . )
2 Again , the term comes from the earliest attempts at explaining the disorder .
3 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 .
4 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.
5 The funding for this and the downtown programme comes from the fiftieth anniversary campaign , launched in 1988 by the museum 's board of trustees .
6 The power for the spring comes from the back legs and feet .
7 Saffron yellow comes from the dried pistils of the saffron crocus , but this plant is now extremely rare and the colour is exceptionally expensive .
8 The disadvantage comes from the potential neglect of 98 per cent of NHS managers who do not join one of the accelerated programmes .
9 Now half the income of the city 's administration comes from the federal government .
10 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 .
11 A health issue comes to the fore Sunday .
12 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 .
13 The primary impetus , on the other hand , for cash accounting in the business sector comes from the undoubted subjectivity of accruals accounting .
14 The word metaphor comes from the Greek metaphorá , which means transference or ‘ to carry over ’ .
15 The plan comes from the powerful Association of Metropolitan Authorities with the aim of cutting road accidents .
16 Beccaria 's reputation for humanity comes from the famous sections that oppose the use of torture and of capital punishment .
17 Much of their charm comes from the careful way that the characters were conceived .
18 A boy comes to the same house the next day and because one arm is injured , they think he must be the robber .
19 The damsel in question comes from the other side of the family — it 's Great-Grandma Rosenbloom , at age eighteen . ’
20 But the major portion of the world crop comes from the Turkish coast of the Black Sea .
21 The contrasting colour in the room comes from the bright rugs and the furniture , and , Mary Jane says ; ‘ We love things with natural vegetable dye shades .
22 The kit for doing the job comes with the necessary fittings so that the job of ‘ winding ’ the coil into one hole and out of the other after removing the pipes from the boiler should take only 15 minutes .
23 The initiative comes from the Operational Requirements Staffs of the Naval , General , and Air Staffs ( now part of the Central Staff under the latest reorganization of the Ministry , but still carrying out the same function — see page 175 ) .
24 A good theatrical director knows that aggression comes from the right wing of a stage .
25 I am told by the probation service , social workers , educationists , and those involved in the youth offenders institute in my constituency that the turning point comes in the late teens , when such offenders get a regular girl friend and decide that it is about time that they acted a little more responsibly .
26 Refurbished 4–Cep unit No 1585 in London an South East Express two–tone brown ( jaffa cake ) livery comes under the impressive signal–box at Canterbury West working as the 12.03 Margate to Charing Cross via Ashford on 23 September 1986 .
27 The disk comes with the necessary programs to decode the 33,000 word dictionary , to allow you to edit , and to re-encode it for use with Scramble .
28 The disk comes with the necessary programs to decode the 33,000 word dictionary , to allow you to edit , and to re-encode it for use with Scramble .
29 In each of Jesus ' beatitudes , God 's blessing comes in the first line , and is then followed by the effect of this blessing on us in the second line .
30 The Lofthouse and Middlesmoor Prize Band played a selection of music ; a note in the feast programme remarked on the fact that the band comes from the upper end of Nidderdale , from which dale hailed the Netherdale Singers , who were paid five shillings — according to the church accounts — for appearing at Burnsall Feast in 1740 .
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