Example sentences of "came the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | In the very early years , people were really exploring ; then came the early botanists who identified what they saw and made lists ; later came the ecologists who related plants to their environment ; by the 1980s conservation of the flora came to the fore . |
2 | ‘ Morning , Alf , ’ came the shouted response from opposite . |
3 | Fringing this stunning awareness came the long-forgotten knowledge of status . |
4 | ‘ Good , ’ came the terse reply . |
5 | Then , as Winter storms abated , came the crabbing season and the pattern of the Looe seasons began all over again . |
6 | ‘ But on a much smaller scale , is n't it ? ’ came the cut-glass tone . |
7 | With the growth in industry there was also a significant development of trade , particularly in the early Tudor period , and with it came the increasing dominance of London in the English economy . |
8 | ‘ There is no need to ask which pupil is responsible for this , ’ came the familiar voice from inside the bucket . |
9 | The door it adorned was open and from inside came the familiar sound of a photocopier on print and collate . |
10 | From the darkness between the semi-detached houses across the street came the familiar figure of Jack Stone . |
11 | And up on the screen came the familiar images : young women water-skiing past the Saint-Georges , farmers in the Bekaa , the great cedar trees of Bsharre . |
12 | But when war came the persistent pedal-point of coalitionism sounded all the louder for the sudden silence of the party truce . |
13 | Periodically through the dust and the rutted mud came the laden pedlar , on his feet or the back of a donkey ; and from his strapped load presently spilled the trifling , precious wares of his trade-the cheap gloves and laces , the toys , trinkets and gee-gaws , the lengths of material — and , most important of all for our purposes here , the ballad sheets , broadsides and booklets that brought news of the wider world and stories and verse to give pleasure round the hearth in the long winter evenings . |
14 | At the end of the list of ingredients came the contentious E numbers which had annoyed Mrs Green . |
15 | Just as rabbits were imported from France , so too came the modern rabbit plague — myxomatosis . |
16 | The travellers ' spirit wilted as loser followed loser , then came the final degradation . |
17 | ‘ Till then , Master Clerk , ’ came the brazen reply . |
18 | Then came the blustering denials of any intention to act dishonestly , which did little to help their cause though many were sincere . |
19 | ‘ Opposing factions are at work , alas , and I fear an uprising , ’ came the daunting reply . |
20 | First came the clashing sound of stone against stone and the resounding thud of boulders dropped to the ground ; then the recurrent frantic yelping . |
21 | " Well , " came the hesitant answer , I 'm finding it very difficult here . |
22 | ‘ Shame on you , ’ came the bantering reply , ‘ not to know one of your own local poets . |
23 | From outside the window came the shrill piping sound of the juniors playing netball . |
24 | Athelstan was sure that they all looked his way but again came the shrill bray of the trumpets . |
25 | Along with the name came the Servite Fathers who had officiated at the old church . |
26 | First came the disappointing news that House of Fraser is to close its branch of Binns in the town . |
27 | Came the sad morning when I had to say goodbye to the crimson walls , white statues , giant mirrors and piped music of O'Brien 's Hotel . |
28 | It was not long after that evening there came the sad news that Herr Bremann had shot himself in a train between Hamburg and Berlin . |
29 | Then came the terrible sense of disbelief and at last the dawning realization that she would never be held in his embrace , breathe in the scent of his cigars or hear his kindly voice ever again . |
30 | ‘ Then , as a thunderbolt , came the terrible catastrophe of 1914 , and progress changed into destruction . ’ |