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

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1 He reported that he had come in by helicopter , and had claimed the hill as Balboa 's on the advice of William , and in a formal note to the Explorers ' Club of New York , of which he was a member .
2 Well came from Bar which is er a matter of six miles , six to eight miles out side Girran and you 'd got to come in by foot or by trap .
3 I mean the erm , the effects of the recession in North America , the great fear of lay offs amongst white collar workers in North America erm began to show itself towards the end of last year , and indeed major corporations were reducing their business travel by cutting back on their travel budgets erm and that was beginning to come through by October/November last year in erm reduced long haul travel .
4 I do n't suppose you could be persuaded to come up by train for a night or two could you ? = that would be so very super , a treat of the first order .
5 Well I do n't mind going by train but I do n't want to come back by train
6 For for come back cause your pram is you do n't want to come back by train because you 're afraid of the steps .
7 It strings a series of acceptably lucky events ( random mutations ) together in a nonrandom sequence so that , at the end of the sequence , the finished product carries the illusion of being very very lucky indeed , far too improbable to have come about by chance alone , even given a timespan millions of times longer than the age of the universe so far .
8 Mr Reeve said the structural steelwork sector ‘ can not sustain the present idiotic level of pricing which has come about by panic tendering , ’ and that the industry 's current overcapacity wil be corrected this year .
9 Up to now this demarcation of activities has only come about by delegation , no control system could enforce these roles .
10 This could have come about by virtue of the fact that at every stage of evolution the original life force ( whatever it may have been and relegated in this book to the pre-life period ) was always carried by the species at the head of the chain , and this was the species which would ultimately become the human race .
11 All the sales , service and administration staff came down by coach to Felcourt , and the service meeting was held on the journey one way and sales the other .
12 And when I asked his orchestra 's publicist if Daniel Barenboim would really want to be interviewed immediately after such a lengthy spell of high-altitude incarceration , she said : ‘ He came in by Concorde , he 's just been on a two-week skiing trip with his family in Switzerland — believe me , he 'll be just fine . ’
13 An entire commission came in by bus from Benghazi and changed the locale from the football club to the playground of a school which had one entrance , telephones and offices where any necessary discussion could be held in private .
14 Enough money came in by mid-March for Chris , a Courtaulds worker for 18 years , and Lorraine to take Leannda to Boston for the first step in the long road to restoring her sight .
15 ‘ I left the car in Parson 's Green and came in by Underground so I could hold your hand all the way back . ’
16 By the time we sat down here I thought well considering that we came in by car door to door practically and that when the driving was n't public transport it it 's taken quite a time to get into
17 You came came up by train ?
18 ‘ The family came back by train , though , ’ his father had concluded .
19 Then we came out by Buckingham Palace and somebody had or
20 This regional structure came about by accident rather than design .
21 It was my first play and it came about by accident , evolving out of that Tolstoy play I was supposed to adapt for the BBC .
22 Like so many other culinary classic dishes crisps came about by accident .
23 Playing was still uppermost in his mind , and the chance to go into management came about by accident .
24 Pöhl has argued that his proposed central banking system ‘ would have an adequately democratic legal base if it came about by agreement between democratic governments , ratified by democratically elected parliaments , and if the system were provided with a clearly defined mandate ’ .
25 Tina Dicks , whose son Thomas , aged six , attends the school , said : ‘ My little boy is extremely happy there and is coming on by leaps and bounds .
26 coming down by lysis ? ’
27 Ann Langford , a Medau trainer , hopes that by coming down by parachute she can send our fund raising sky high .
28 ‘ Yes ; it 's coming in by Copers Bakery .
29 " Dr Lorrimer thought that the service would end up with about three immense laboratories doing the work for the whole country with exhibits coming in by air .
30 ‘ He says the shipment 's coming in by boat ? ’
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