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

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1 Trained by Nicky Henderson and the mount of Richard Dunwoody , Flown has come through a satisfactory preparation for the step-up to the ultimate test today .
2 The new pathway students were not identified by tutors in the clinical clerkships , and unreported data collected by Dr Gordon Moore , who coordinated the introduction of the scheme , suggest that new pathway students tended to be assessed as rather better than those who had come through the traditional route .
3 ‘ People forget that the nucleus of our side — notably our pack — is made up of players who have come through the junior ranks . ’
4 When Duncan and Myeloski had come through the small terminal , they soon found that no car had been sent to greet them .
5 CHEMICALS group Courtaulds has come through the past year with a 3pc profits rise but is far from confident market conditions will be any easier in 1993 .
6 and , and they do it about four or five times , you know , the king of Snowdonia , welcome to see and all the bugles going you know all of a sudden he appears in the middle of the picture he says oh I 've come through the back door
7 The village founded by King Billy has come through the bad times and it has not surrendered .
8 He could not get over the fact that the only woman who had come through the near-impossible screening , then training , had not been some six foot Amazon with a face like Atilla the Hun — but a petite , feminine five foot three in her stockinged feet , who turned all the men 's head when she passed .
9 Teachers , like managers , need to review their attitudes , especially as the majority will themselves have come through the nursing system " which will have shaped their values and behaviour .
10 THE report , Stevie explained as Patrick drove away from the station , had come through the British Embassy in Bucharest .
11 New York has always been the place to come for a good show trial .
12 Thus has come about the present status of evolution of which man is the apparent culmination but not the real summit ; for he is himself a transitional being and stands at the turning point of the whole movement . ’
13 If you have not been able to come to Q.T. Days for a while , please try to come during the new session .
14 These architects fervently felt that the time had come for a new type of public building .
15 After a hundred years of ambling forward in happy confusion , the time has surely come for a new broom or brooms to sweep clean .
16 Everyone had come for a good time , and they did not want it spoiling by some wildmen .
17 But many Americans thought the time had come for a political change to the safer conservatism of the Republican Party .
18 The time had come for a deaf person to occupy it and Hudson 's chairmanship therefore lasted only three years .
19 The time has come for a radical re-examination of the provision of services for this particularly disadvantaged group of people .
20 We must recognize that the time has come for a national crusade against pornography .
21 The time has come for the Prime Minister to stop playing Conservative party politics with the issues and to rise to the real level of the challenges that confront us in Britain , everyone in Europe and , indeed , every inhabitant of the planet .
22 I think the time has now come for the National Heritage Memorial Fund to be split and a separate body established for Scotland .
23 By this time , according to Dyos and Aldcroft , most of the potential for river improvement had been exhausted and the time had come for the deliberate making of waterways , a step which , though it was a natural development from a learning process on the rivers , was yet one of great import .
24 Now that the time had come for the depleted garrison to shrink back inside the new fortifications , accommodation had to be found for the ladies displaced from Dr Dunstaple 's house .
25 Explaining , now , more of the past history of Samavia , Lorestan reveals that the Lost Prince has been found , the time has come for the corrupt government to be overthrown and the message must be carried through Europe that ‘ the lamp is lighted ’ .
26 This has come as a terrible shock .
27 ‘ This has come as a terrible shock .
28 For secondary school teachers of mathematics who have been eager to respond to the call for investigative work , the introduction of GCSE coursework assessment may have come as a rational consequence of what they see as timely changes in the curriculum .
29 It 's come as a major surprise to his friends at the training club .
30 Charles Tompkins , managing director of NOS , a subsidiary of Cable & Wireless , said the contract has come as a major breakthrough for his company , propelling it into the major league of offshore suppliers .
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