Example sentences of "he come [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Do n't we want write and in fact get him to come to the next meeting then
2 between a lot of parked cars and there was a , I was coming down the road and all I needed to do was to actually stop where I was cos there was enough room on his side of the road for him to come past the parked car and round me
3 It is hard to imagine him coming at a better time as we plan to make our first Diocesan Assembly the centrepiece of his visit , on Saturday 10th June .
4 Engine trouble on the first leg did n't manage to stop him coming in a creditable second .
5 ‘ Not last night ; I heard him come in a long time after I went to bed .
6 Our Stella says the lad who butted him comes from a well-to-do family . ’
7 Even the opening report of him comes from an unusual source — his own vivid memory of how he learned to walk .
8 Had he come to the wrong crossroads ?
9 He came down the tiny steps at the side of the stage and sat beside Zach .
10 However , after his stepfather 's death in 1859 , when he came into a comfortable inheritance , Wallis never again made the same artistic impact , though he remained an Academy exhibitor until 1877 .
11 When he came into the Provincial 's small executive team under managing director in June 1990 life was tough for the industry as a whole after the storms and other claims-raising disasters .
12 IAN WOOSNAM , so out of form coming into the Masters , nevertheless began to put up an heroic defence at Augusta National yesterday and was within a stroke of the lead as he came into the finishing holes in his second round .
13 Dr Nolan looked deadbeat as he came into the little bedroom at Milltown .
14 I mean he came for a flying visit and he went back did n't he ? he came for a flying visit and went back
15 I mean he came for a flying visit and he went back did n't he ? he came for a flying visit and went back
16 Then , during his three years in exile he came for the first time into close contact with the main exponents of the Gregorian ideal , and we must ask how far and in what circumstances he adopted the phraseology of the Gregorian reformers ; then , whether he adopted the theoretical structure which their favourite phrase libertas ecclesiae expressed , or adopted the phrase for use only in exceptional circumstances and for special reasons .
17 He came of a crusading line which has held the manor of Templecombe since time immemorial ? ’
18 He came of a labouring family and he himself began work in the local cotton industry at the age of ten .
19 He came to no more meals , and Roland feared Fergus thought this was a function of his , Roland 's , resentment .
20 On his way out of the city he came to a poor crofter 's cottage .
21 He came to a macabre end .
22 The pavement had been much repaired , and it was difficult to synchronise his steps so that the middle of each foot fell exactly on the cracks between the paving stones , but with some concentration and a few judicious half-steps he managed it ; then he came to a long blue-grey line of asphalt where a pipe had obviously been repaired , and walked along that instead free from the worry of the paving stones between the cracks .
23 After an hour he came to a small roadside inn that stood on the crest of a shallow hill and , twisting in his saddle , he saw that the inn gave him a good view of the road right to the horizon so that he would see any French pursuit long before it represented any danger .
24 He came to a wide gap which had been trodden into mud by cattle .
25 For all his thinking he came to a sole conclusion .
26 He came to a bad end . ’
27 The actor just did not know the lines , and , though he could manage the exchanges of dialogue quite well , every time he came to a big speech , he would dry .
28 For the first time he came to a horrified acceptance of the woman 's view .
29 Soon he came to a bright restaurant on Broadway .
30 He came to a stumbling halt with the point of the bayonet less than a foot away from his chest .
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