Example sentences of "come [prep] a [adj] " 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 In the final , Cowan met up with Mark Schofield ( Lancs ) , the number two seed who himself had come through a tough semi-final meeting with fellow Bisham boy , Philip Fowler .
3 Trained by Nicky Henderson and the mount of Richard Dunwoody , Flown has come through a satisfactory preparation for the step-up to the ultimate test today .
4 New York has always been the place to come for a good show trial .
5 First and foremost erm there is an assessment of those officers by their immediate supervisors and er a then ensues whereby er suitable officers are s selected to come for a two day assessment at er police headquarters .
6 These architects fervently felt that the time had come for a new type of public building .
7 After a hundred years of ambling forward in happy confusion , the time has surely come for a new broom or brooms to sweep clean .
8 Everyone had come for a good time , and they did not want it spoiling by some wildmen .
9 Government spending had already been reviewed and cut substantially , but the time had now come for a great public gesture ; this was supplied by the appointment of the Geddes Committee , a typical Lloyd George manoeuvre using businessmen instead of MPs or ministers .
10 The most awkward joints were where the glazing bars met the curved members , any-way , after cutting about fifty joints in all , rebates for glass , slots for fielded panels , mouldings on corners and moulded glazing fillets the time had come for a complete dry assembly of the members .
11 But many Americans thought the time had come for a political change to the safer conservatism of the Republican Party .
12 The time had come for a deaf person to occupy it and Hudson 's chairmanship therefore lasted only three years .
13 She hoped it would throw Maurin off guard , persuade him she had come for a little of his flirtatious conversation at the least , a few more questions about Durance and Sabine Jourdain at the most .
14 The time has come for a radical re-examination of the provision of services for this particularly disadvantaged group of people .
15 We must recognize that the time has come for a national crusade against pornography .
16 ‘ If the indicators for the first quarter remain flat or suggest a further fall in output , then the time will have come for a further cut in interest rates , by another 1 per cent or more . ’
17 This has come as a terrible shock .
18 ‘ This has come as a terrible shock .
19 For secondary school teachers of mathematics who have been eager to respond to the call for investigative work , the introduction of GCSE coursework assessment may have come as a rational consequence of what they see as timely changes in the curriculum .
20 It 's come as a major surprise to his friends at the training club .
21 Charles Tompkins , managing director of NOS , a subsidiary of Cable & Wireless , said the contract has come as a major breakthrough for his company , propelling it into the major league of offshore suppliers .
22 ‘ When you got the solicitor 's letter saying you 'd inherited the place it must have come as a terrific shock .
23 This was where his grandfather had come as a young man , to worship and to be at peace with himself .
24 The knowledge that fitzAlan had a family had come as a strange shock .
25 His success had come as a complete surprise to him .
26 The marriage had come as a complete shock even to Eliot 's closest friends , such as Emily Hale and Mary Trevelyan .
27 It should have come as a complete surprise , but the man swayed , taking Ross 's fist on his shoulder .
28 It had been clear that Artai 's decision to name Jehan as a member of the embassy had come as a complete surprise .
29 His death today has come as a complete shock .
30 NEIL Kinnock 's slightly manic conducting of Men of Harlech at Egglescliffe School on Friday may have come as a mild surprise to the attendant gentlemen of the Press .
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