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

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1 Trevor Williamson , an 82nd minute replacement for Stephen McBride , floated in a corner which was knocked down and McMullan , who had come on in the 64th , hammered it into the net .
2 Yeah it 's like with me , I mean of course do n't forget that I 've got a good two hundred pounds to come on about the fifth of December from the British Legion 's savings .
3 Injuries have hit the club , and coach Billy Lomax had to come on as a substitute midway through the second half .
4 The exchange rate mechanism works as follows : ( a ) a rise in money supply causes interest rates to fall ; ( b ) the rise in money supply plus the fall in interest rates causes an increased supply of domestic currency to come on to the foreign exchange market ; this causes the exchange rate to fall ; ( c ) this will cause increased exports and reduced imports , and hence a multiplied rise in national income .
5 ERA is one of more than 50 new ales to come on to the Scottish market in the past year .
6 The yellow nylon shirt with the frothy frill amounts to an offence against taste bordering on the criminal , yet it somehow works to offset his complexion ( pale blue ) and the ensemble enables him to come on like a chat-show host from Hell — vast smiles and arms flung out in gestures of mock formality .
7 Worst Career Move of the month : ex-world 's greatest sleazeball James Woods trying to come on like a middle-aged woman 's dreamboat opposite Dolly Parton in Straight Talk , which also has the biggest supporting cast of the month : Griffin Dunne , John Sayles , Spalding Gray .
8 And then we used to and they used to come along with the old cart and start leading .
9 The other lad who made a commitment came as a non-believer but was willing to come along with an open mind and on studying the gospels came to believe Jesus was indeed who he said he was and shortly after made his commitment .
10 But I cooled him out and he agreed to come along to a new rehearsal place that we 'd found , The Rose And Crown in Wandsworth .
11 ‘ Acid house was nothing to what 's in store , ’ he says , and Danny nods excitedly in agreement : ‘ Who knows what 's going to come along in the next few years ? ’
12 We turned our ponies and galloped back to the Legation , where we learnt that news had just come in of a great victory for the Shoan army .
13 It turned out to have come in through the curved zip which is unprotected by a weather flap .
14 This beggar had come in to the fitting shop , corner at the back corner , where he should n't have been .
15 While it has come in for a certain amount of criticism , it has also attracted much praise , especially from industry .
16 Understandably , this presumption has come in for a great deal of criticism .
17 Nevertheless , Sun has come in for no small amount of criticism in pursuing what is often strictly an ‘ invented here ’ approach to technology solutions , at the expense of making some pragmatic marketing decisions .
18 What I might actually do it see if Ian 's not doing anything if he not come in for the full time that they 're cleaning up , but come in for those sort of things .
19 It is hard to disappoint someone who may have come in as a last port of call when all other channels to sort out their problems seem closed .
20 Only a party bigot would claim that they had somehow come in with the Conservative Government three years earlier .
21 It had been Dr Rolleston 's great sorrow that he had not been able to help children who had come in with the dreaded Infantile Paralysis , not that any other professor in Europe had been able to do better than by careful nursing stop the paralysis spreading .
22 What has been er what has been pleasing is that a n a number of the people who 've come in on the last two or three years or so er are younger people , people in their er late teens or twenties .
23 From Wolhusen the circular itinerary now continues south on road 10 which has come in on the left ( ie east from Luzern .
24 Reproaching herself for not having unlocked it when she had come in from the main door , she rose quickly and went to open up .
25 Said his friend-cum-mentor , Irving Layton , in looking back over the period , ‘ I had a very sharp feeling in the early fifties that poetry in Canada had come in from the cold and was starting to gain momentum . ’
26 Then Beryl went on to outline a couple of job offers that had come in within the last few days .
27 Half of the extra cash will be forthcoming only if projects of sufficient quality to take up the whole £2 million come in by the next deadline for grants on 1 April .
28 If Lili had come in by the back door it had been very late indeed .
29 But I quite see that you need someone to come in on a practical issue like what to do about his tenants .
30 In terms of progressing or taking part in the discussion , can I suggest that if you want to come in on a particular item , you put your name board up like that , so that we can readily observe it er and equally , our friend who is looking after the microphones can make sure that the vol the volume of your microphone is turned up at the appropriate time .
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