Example sentences of "come from the [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 , John ( d. ante Feb. 1315 ) , popularly regarded as a saint , should not be assumed to have come from the village in Kent of that name .
2 Soon the only sound came from the carousing in the hall below .
3 Her first impulse was to run away , to run blindly anywhere , as fast as she could go , because the cry quite certainly came from the direction in which the dilapidated signpost was pointing — and that signpost pointed to DANGER .
4 Most of the day-to-day trade came from the man in the street , and it would be wrong to infer that every coffin-maker and funeral furnisher hungered after catering for the top end of the market .
5 The single small pellet collection came from the desert in Qatar ( Table 2.3 ) , and the analysis of bones from this desert variety shows remarkable similarity to the bone assemblage from Sweden despite the great difference in species composition and diversity of the prey .
6 The memory-discs connected to these computers came from the factory in Mainz , West Germany , and the printers from the factory at Jarfalla in Sweden .
7 The stimulus for the reopening of dialogue ( broken off by North Korea in early 1990 in protest over the annual joint South Korean-United States " Team Spirit " military exercise ) came from the North in late June , following improving relations between South Korea and the Soviet Union [ see p. 37533 ] .
8 The expression is well known in the South , especially among service families and may I add , there were a great number of fine soldiers who came from the South in units as famous as that fine body of men who serve and have served in the DLI .
9 The severest revilement , however , probably came from the mob in the street and the clergy .
10 His caution had proved right when a short time later the sounds of gunfire , explosions , shouting and crashing pursuit had erupted in the woods , coming from the direction in which most of the escaping sect heavies had headed .
11 The light coming from the clock in front of her .
12 People were coming from the village in groups of two and three , a stealthy procession .
13 Next Friday morning , I think you were all here when we were planning this , but just to remind you , next Friday morning , erm , somebody else is coming from the team in Harlow .
14 No boat could come from the mainland in this wind . ’
15 The main boost for those groups will come from the reduction in the rate of ACT on dividends from 25 per cent now to 22.5 per cent next year and 20 per cent in the 1994-95 tax year .
16 The heroine of the romance novel is presented at a moment of transition in her life , an isolated figure ; the romance narrative depicts young women at a point of defining themselves as adult women , a definition that must come from the heroine in the absence of any supportive network :
17 Come from the way in which we do n't necessarily take on board what we are learning .
18 It does not , for instance , impinge on the fifteen or so criteria for sound initial teacher training which come from the CATE in its guidance about the professional education of those who teach in schools .
19 This may not strike some of you as unusual but in my area silver coins rarely come from the ground in their natural colour ; they are usually black or slightly grey .
20 The vision of the fabliaux offered by R. Howard Bloch ( 1986 ) seems to fit this definition squarely : he sees fabliau narrative as the origin and catalyst of sexual desire ; in reading , or writing , the fabliaux , sexual experience is purely linguistic : " " if any pleasure is attached to sex in the fabliaux it comes from the deferral in speech , of speech , substituting for the act " " .
21 The word comes from the Latin in cubo ( to lie heavily upon ) , which probably referred to the powerful nightmare which would assault the victims after seduction .
22 The radiation , which comes From the arc in the mercury vapour , is mainly ultraviolet with a wavelength of 253–7 nanometres .
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