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

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1 Poetry alone is worldwide and limitless ; and even through the mangling of translation , the images of beauty come through a hundred tongues unsullied .
2 ‘ People forget that the nucleus of our side — notably our pack — is made up of players who have come through the junior ranks . ’
3 The village founded by King Billy has come through the bad times and it has not surrendered .
4 Carwyn desperately wanted to come through a few heats of the Pipeline Masters .
5 If there is an approach for the Timex workers to come through the proper channels , I will recommend on behalf of the Executive for the Standing Orders Committee that we hear a Timex worker before the end of the Conference .
6 ( b ) The equal balancing of the two melodic lines in this case , and , at the same time , making them sufficiently powerful to come through the orchestral tutti , presents little difficulty if the simple principles of doubling are well understood and applied .
7 The son of Caerleon is a progressive type , apparently certain to come of a few pounds for that introduction , and should be good enough to take the Queen 's Own Yorkshire Dragoons Stakes .
8 By the law of primitive socialist accumulation we mean the entire sum of conscious and semi-spontaneous tendencies in the state economy which are directed towards the expansion and consolidation of the collective organisation of labour in Soviet economy and which are dictated to the Soviet state on the basis of necessity : ( 1 ) the determination of proportions in the distribution of productive forces , formed on the basis of struggle against the law of value inside and outside the country and having as their objective task the achievement of the optimum expanded socialist reproduction in the given conditions and of the maximum defensive capacity of the whole system in conflict with capitalist commodity production ; ( 2 ) the determination of the proportions of accumulation of material resources for expanded reproduction , especially at the expense of private economy , in so far as the determined amounts of the accumulation are dictated compulsorily to the Soviet state under threat of economic disproportion , growth of private capital , weakening of the bond between the state economy and peasant production , derangement in years to come of the necessary proportions of expanded socialist reproduction and weakening of the whole system in its conflict with capitalist commodity production inside and outside the country .
9 It will be more concerned with how industrial relations practices are related to the distinctive logic of operation of public enterprises , and how they have changed as the enterprises themselves have come under the political pressures referred to above .
10 The sounds had come from a hundred yards east of the dell .
11 The passage of the Riot Act of 1715 , which made assembling for political ( as well as other ) purposes potentially a capital offence , reveals how far the Whigs had come from the early days when they had actively promoted political demonstrations and deliberately sought an alliance with " the crowd " .
12 Similar support for a modified accelerator theory as a determinant of investment has come from the recent studies of Catinat ( 1991 ) and Ford and Poret ( 1990 ) .
13 The remainder come from the following categories :
14 Both animals , with many others , had come from the higher parts of the rivers .
15 Much later , it seemed , she awoke and when she turned over and looked towards where the chanting had come from the African men and women had eaten and were packing away and decamping .
16 We do not know in detail whence the monks were recruited ; but on the whole they seem mainly to have come from the upper classes , and perhaps from the families of substantial town-dwellers .
17 It was obvious that not all these people could have come from the upper classes .
18 They claimed the move had been simply to bring Scotland into line with England and Wales and that the initiative had come from the big bookmakers , who would be the main beneficiaries .
19 Here , COURSE and LECTURER come from the original entities and TIMETABLE stems from information about the coincidence of the two , that is , their relationship .
20 Since 1950 my influences have come from the Flemish Primitives , Frances de la Tour and Stanley Spencer .
21 They were country people in a sense that Melanie was not , although she had just come from the green fields and they might have lived in London all their lives .
22 But the most cohesive programme to yet be devised has come from the United Nations Environmental Programme ( UNEP ) .
23 The main differences between the account of the journalist and the sociologist come from the different orientations that each brings to the subject of study .
24 It is undeniable that a great deal of important and fundamental research has come from the several centres of excellence in the USA .
25 These items are simply a taste of the things to come in the following pages .
26 He was to come in the small hours , .
27 The City is braced for far worse figures to come in the coming months , unless the Government recovery package produces a startling turn round in optimism .
28 The City is braced for far worse figures to come in the coming months , unless the Government recovery package produces a startling turn round in optimism .
29 ‘ We can not afford to allow political decisions to come before the commercial consequences of such an act . ’
30 So far had music come in the sixteen years since Palestrina 's death .
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