Example sentences of "come [adv] at [art] " in BNC.
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1 | With only three minutes remaining in their Sharwood 's Irish Senior Cup semi-final clash against Pegasus , Sinead , who had only come on at the start of the second-half , popped up to score the only goal of the game . |
2 | An elderly female novelist had come in at a quarter to six and Penelope had found herself trying to explain why her latest novel had not been reviewed in the Sunday Telegraph , why it had not been advertised more widely , why copies had not been displayed on the bookstall of a friend 's local station , why it had not yet been reprinted . |
3 | He had come in at the door , he had lain down with her , he had been her lover . |
4 | A similar directive covering public works contracts over £3.5 million is scheduled to come in at the beginning of 1990 . |
5 | ‘ They 're going to come in at the far end . ’ |
6 | In Lucien 's family , they had only come together at the times appointed by the Church : meals , various holidays , family councils and those mysterious , Church-nominated occasions when children were conceived . |
7 | He was intended to come down at the wrong moment , disappear , do the same again , then go shooting through the roof when the mechanics of the wire go wrong . |
8 | There 's no way I can manage to come down at the moment . ’ |
9 | ‘ Not that anyone 's going to come anyway at the moment . |
10 | THE recovery in the housing market has come just at the right time for CALA , the Scottish house-builder , which saw interim losses nearly double to £2.85 million . |
11 | He can tell them in training , but they 've got to perform out there on the pitch , and probably this game has come just at the right time , after suffering a defeat like that , this is the time to get out there and show the supporters what they can really do . |
12 | I 've planned me route , I 'm going down the M six , I need to come off at the spaghetti junction whatever it is , and I 'm going to check me clock and I 'm going allow plenty of time to get there . |
13 | Whichever way you looked at it , that name seemed to come up at every turn : Rose Hilaire mother of Steve , employer of Lily , and niece of a body under Coffin 's floorboards . |
14 | The narrowness of Foxton was at least one of the arguments to come up at the end of the century in favour of the inclined plane . |
15 | But he could not have come back at a more opportune time as far as Selkirk are concerned . |
16 | He 'd have come back at the weekend , most likely . |
17 | To heighten concern about the Convention , Broken Promise could not have come out at a better time . |
18 | so of course that would 've come out at a later stage , yeah , you know there 's a lot of business miles involved in flying to all these er places . |
19 | Their union has not only survived the rigours of a decade , but has come out at the other end stronger than ever . |
20 | If it had come out at the same time , it would have been submerged , and if it had come out afterwards it would have been seen as merely reactive . |
21 | If I increase the bubbles in the column they just seem to come out at the water inlet holes at the water surface . |
22 | But remember that any increase in death cover is likely to come out at the expense of a lower retirement benefit . |
23 | Are you able to come out at the weekend with us ? ’ |
24 | Where a problem seems obviously more complex they suggest that the client makes an appointment with an adviser to come back at a time when the bureau is officially closed to the public . |
25 | The counsellor made it clear that if they wanted to come back at a later stage , they would be welcome . |
26 | If they say we 've got to pay it , well then I 'll have to come back at the council meeting . |
27 | I was confident I could wear her down eventually , but I certainly never expected her to come across at the first time of asking . |
28 | If the unholy alliance in favour of the National Curriculum is likely to come apart at the seams over the issue of resource , so also , given the very different aspirations of those who support its introduction , there is likely to be a parting of the ways over principles . |
29 | The reasons for the job cuts are a classified secret , but volunteers for redundancy and early retirement are being urged to come forward at the base in Cheltenham , where seven thousand people work . |
30 | Still they waited , as the Scots came on at a canter . |