Example sentences of "[noun sg] comes [adv prt] at [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Indeed , among the more bizarre places to find an Armani are holes in the wall in the Sicilian hill villages around Corleone where unlaundered mafioso cash comes out at tea time every day in search of status-promoting glad rags — the same suits that turn up simultaneously in posh Paris bistros , Los Angeles lizard lounges and the boardrooms of the most respectable British banks .
2 Before the turbo comes in at 2000rpm , it 's decidedly sluggish and there 's no mistaking when this happens .
3 I continue to be surprised all those little panes of glass have n't been smashed in , but a metal door comes down at night and the neighbourhood is full of tourists anyway .
4 ‘ Your teeth 'll be straight in six months , and you can get contact lenses when your father 's insurance comes in at Christmas , grow a bosom and stun them all . ’
5 This version costs £66 , while the chrome-finished model comes in at £70 and the gold-plated one at £102 .
6 A 17″ colour model comes in at $4,700 : both ship next month .
7 DEC LOSS FOR YEAR COMES OUT AT $2,795m
8 Nothing is wasted and only the dregs are left , charred and thoroughly sifted , by the time the municipal refuse truck comes through at dawn the next day .
9 With from 16Mb to 96Mb RAM , 207Mb or 424Mb disk , two Sbus slots , one serial and one parallel line , SCSI 2 , 8-bit audio , Ethernet but no multi-processing support or ISDN the entry level model , with a 15″ SuperVGA colour screen comes in at $5,500 .
10 On CD-ROM , personal ODT 2.0 costs £960 , the server version is £1,950 and a development copy comes in at £1,190 .
11 The Motif version is scheduled for release in July and costs $1,500 , the OS/2-Presentation Manager edition is priced at $1,000 whilst a Windows copy comes in at $500 .
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