Example sentences of "[noun sg] comes [prep] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | ( The word booze comes from the same source . ) |
2 | 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 . |
3 | 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. |
4 | The funding for this and the downtown programme comes from the fiftieth anniversary campaign , launched in 1988 by the museum 's board of trustees . |
5 | The disadvantage comes from the potential neglect of 98 per cent of NHS managers who do not join one of the accelerated programmes . |
6 | Now half the income of the city 's administration comes from the federal government . |
7 | 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 . |
8 | 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 . |
9 | The primary impetus , on the other hand , for cash accounting in the business sector comes from the undoubted subjectivity of accruals accounting . |
10 | The word metaphor comes from the Greek metaphorá , which means transference or ‘ to carry over ’ . |
11 | The plan comes from the powerful Association of Metropolitan Authorities with the aim of cutting road accidents . |
12 | Much of their charm comes from the careful way that the characters were conceived . |
13 | A boy comes to the same house the next day and because one arm is injured , they think he must be the robber . |
14 | The damsel in question comes from the other side of the family — it 's Great-Grandma Rosenbloom , at age eighteen . ’ |
15 | But the major portion of the world crop comes from the Turkish coast of the Black Sea . |
16 | A good theatrical director knows that aggression comes from the right wing of a stage . |
17 | 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 . |
18 | 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 . |
19 | 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 . |
20 | Everyone looks at each other with the blank expression reserved especially for when someone who is off their trolley comes into the near vicinity . |
21 | Mary Quant 's inspiration comes from the glam style of the 70's — Colour Quantastic can guarantee some really groovy shades . |
22 | The other African eagle owl pellet sample comes from the spotted eagle owl . |
23 | Part of the evidence comes from the fascinating phenomenon of ‘ introns ’ and ‘ exons ’ . |
24 | I believe that one firm is at present training one male monotype operator , who is being taught by a woman , It is true that this evidence comes from the opposing side so to speak , but nowhere is a counter-assertion put forward by the union that men had applied to learn and been turned away . |
25 | Mandrake comes from the same family as the potato ( once thought to be endowed with aphrodisiac powers itself ) . |
26 | Michael Degnan , 30 years in Bishop Auckland , strutted the theory last weekend shared by Arthur , Squeak and a few others of the Cumberland 's Friday night faithful that the name comes from the cockfighting pit that once was out the back . |
27 | The name comes from the Hindustani word nil meaning blue and the Persian word for cow , gau . |
28 | It is not a tuck stitch at all , but the name comes from the same term used in dressmaking , where woven fabric is stitched , or tucked , into ridges that look much like this fabric . |
29 | The name comes from the old Norse word meaning ‘ to gush ’ and was not only given to the township nearby , but got into the English language as a descriptive name for any jet of water . |
30 | James Baker expressed on Aug. 10 the US view that Resolution 661 gave " the legal authority necessary to constitute such an embargo or blockade , provided the request comes from the legitimate government of Kuwait " . |