Example sentences of "come [adv prt] in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I think we owe it to people like or at least to give them another crack at the whip to see if they 've come on in that interim period cos it 's a good six months since we interviewed
2 As the sun began to set over Auckland they took a short flight on a tiny seaplane , and the gold light enhanced the aerial view of Auckland as the lights began to come on in white wood houses , skyscrapers , hotels .
3 " I 've asked Sir Geoffrey Gillington to come along in half an hour . "
4 It may well be the same story that has come down in two different strands of tradition .
5 What 's happened is that policy makers 've shifted the emphasis instead of protecting tariffs they 're protected using long long tariff barriers right which are a lot more invisible to er , to G A T T do n't come under erm G A T T regulations , what those tariffs do nevertheless , tariffs have , have come down in manufactured goods right , erm , since the second world war when G A T T was er , was established .
6 Earlier she had come down in this lift with Steve and now she was going up with the last person on earth she could have envisaged .
7 The same Gary Player financially assisted a smiling Bantu by the name of Vincent Tshabalala to come over in 1976 .
8 They will certainly have the fullest support of my Department and the Government in that and I hope that they will have the fullest support of Opposition Members , too , although that has not come through in this debate .
9 If Mr McCrickard gets it right , the benefits of cost savings will begin to come through in 1991 .
10 Looking to the future , she warned that 1993 looked set to be a tougher year than last , ‘ Education funding in the UK looks less secure than in 1992 , and there are no major World Bank projects likely to come through in 1993 .
11 It was so hot that Perdita would have liked to have worn shorts or a dress , but her mosquito bites had come up in huge red bumps and were oozing and itching like mad , so she settled for her pale pink jeans and a dark blue shirt .
12 This is not the first time the issue of control has come up in this column but because yours is a sign that tends to resist going with the flow , all too often you meet people and circumstances that appear to block your path .
13 But ask one of the sergeants to come up in ten minutes to pack up the mallet for the Yard lab , will you ?
14 He carries only nine pounds more than in 1992 and despite being plagued by a wind problem since that success , has come back in great style after being ‘ tubed . ’
15 Mala had come out in one of her crumpled dark coveralls .
16 But all those have come out in eighteen forty three at the time of the disruption .
17 The reason it 's come out in this way is that you had the debate on the er original proposals for this extra money which did n't go as was recommended er and you made a decision on that and then later in the agenda , and I ca n't find the , the exact point now but you had a discussion and a suggestion was made and agreed that if there was any money left over investigations should be made and that the surveyor should give erm consideration Madam Chairman to using any of that , perhaps for a camera , and that was agreed , and it is noted somewhere , and that 's what Mr has done .
18 Thi this is something which has come out in several places I do n't know whether the members noted it , erm the er it also touches on , on , on what my colleague said earlier and the item in paragraph V er the assumption of the demand remain much as it is , heavily towards the South East particularly Gatwick .
19 How things went with them from then on we know from what has come out in public .
20 But if ‘ Report To The Floor ’ had come out in 1982 , I would have liked it . ’
21 Because there 's obviously a concern inside that viewer that 's come out in 90 per cent of other artists ’ work . ’
22 In voting overwhelmingly on Nov. 14 for the debate , the Supreme Soviet had come out in open revolt against its legislation being either ignored or countermanded because of administrative chaos and the so-called " war of laws " with the republics .
23 ‘ Give me a chance to prove myself , Mrs Smelley , and then you would n't ‘ ave to come out in all weathers , when you suddenly discover you 've taken more bookin 's than you expected . ’
24 They used to come out in threes I think moulds .
25 ‘ There 's a need for a national investigation into why these figures seem to come out in this way , not just within Strathclyde , but within Britain , ’ he said .
26 The next step would be to come out in public and call a Press conference .
27 it 's just about to come out in three weeks time
28 But I want you to come back in four weeks .
29 And he said I was to come back in six months ’ time . ’
30 I went for an audition and they told me to come back in six months time I was determined to get the part so I practised day and night to be him . ’
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