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

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1 These items are simply a taste of the things to come in the following pages .
2 The man who inspired many of the staff to come in the first place was Seymour Papert .
3 Even Tan 's timing of the mysterious opening arpeggio gives warming of the drama to come in the first movement .
4 Andy Murdoch 's fine penalty save from Mark Hateley was a bitter pill for the home support to swallow but worse was to come in the 65th minute .
5 You see , it 's not up to the participants to come in the right mood .
6 With out-of-sorts Tony Jones his first-round opponent over 19 frames on Monday , Wattana 's moment of truth is likely to come in the second round when he will almost certainly face favourite Stephen Hendry , the world No 1 , over 25 frames .
7 Well , I 've got , if you you just bear with me a moment , I still have one foot dragging in H one , but I thought we 'd got to the stage where in order to try and clarify thinking on the matter we ought to progress onto H two , erm , that just let me reveal the thinking , erm that , before I do that can I just say in terms of mechanics those of you who have just joined us for the first time , could you turn your name boards round so I can see them , thank you , and when you want to come in the normal practice is to put your name board on end , so it will attract our attention .
8 He was to come in the small hours , .
9 Now if we 'd have the voice of the Funny Man guessed we would have had some postal contestant winners , but they now go back in the box with those yet to come in the next week .
10 Parisians saw the shape of things to come in the wooden triangulation towers which were set up throughout the city .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 That was bad enough ; but worse yet was to come in the third stage .
14 One thing that , that we did spend , I mean , I do n't know the Festival seems to come in an awful rush this time I suppose cos , cos
15 The gang would have come in a high-powered motor launch , not in an ordinary punt , hired from the boat-yard half a mile upstream .
16 Sam Yaeger , ever an exhibitionist , had come in a white dinner jacket , having lent Gareth his black .
17 The final showdown between the Viet-Minh and the cream of the French colonial Army had come in a deserted valley in the north of Vietnam , around a small village called Dien Bien Phu .
18 If I add that the majority of Cubists were formerly considered to be Fauves , I can demonstrate how far these young artists have come in a short time and the logic of their vision .
19 The only clue had come in the late morning .
20 So far had music come in the sixteen years since Palestrina 's death .
21 The greatest period of administrative reform in the history of the Habsburg territories had come in the two decades after 1749 ( see pp. 153–4 ) ; here Joseph achieved much less than his mother .
22 Several titles are already available with the joint logo , and the first new titles under the arrangement come in the first half of this year .
23 This from Garry who had just come in the front door .
24 She read it idiotically at least three times , until she 'd convinced herself there was no hidden psychological message in the bare statement of fact , and then realised that someone had just come in the front door of the flat and was moving around in the hall .
25 A fall in urban rent values can also be seen in Oxford , although the evidence cited is less comprehensive than that for York , and the most drastic fall seems to have come in the second half of the fifteenth century after a period of relative stability .
26 I ca n't believe how far I have come in the past couple of years .
27 Oh I 've come in the wrong way
28 But the most vicious discriminiation had come in the previous year , from Edmund Wilson , who applauded the structure of The Waste Land by contrasting it to ‘ the extremely ill-focused Eight Cantos of his imitator Mr Ezra Pound , who presents only a bewildering mosaic with no central emotion to provide a key ’ .
29 ‘ He came in a hired car in those days .
30 The bread was sliced-white , the butter was packed in New Zealand , and the marmalade came in a tiny plastic box .
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