Example sentences of "have come [to-vb] [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 But after 25 years loyal service with the RAF , the time has come to look at a more modern replacement .
2 On the 27 January 1991 Siad Barré fled the country , and the clans embarked on the intractable conflict which has come to look like a nation intent on destroying itself .
3 The chapter has come to rest with a description of the currently established , liberal-democratic , constitutional theory — a theory which argues that the constitution provides for a system of Cabinet or prime ministerial government within a larger parliamentary democracy in which Parliament is legally sovereign and the people are politically sovereign .
4 Sayer has come to work as a laboratory assistant but he 's drawn to a group of patients scattered throughout the hospital .
5 Fundamentally , many regard the ‘ conflict ’ over housing as an extension of the major divisions in society and argue that the allocation of housing is determined largely by the power that each group has come to possess in a society with a long history of class conflict ( Haddon 1970 ; Duncan 1976 ; Mellor 1977 ) .
6 Pluvial and arid periods had always alternated but at some point the latter must have come to dominate in a prolonged drought .
7 ‘ We 've come to listen to a very distinguished visitor , Berel Karlinsky , a famous man we 've all heard of .
8 You 've come to hear about a far yester-year and the life of Marie Grubbe , if I 'm not mistaken ! ’
9 Melanie had been told they had come to live in a great city but found herself again in a village , a grey one .
10 Half by desipience , half by proclivity , he had come to live in a world where the only significant leisure activities were coupling and consuming .
11 This was the first occasion when I experienced the disillusion of actually seeing a place I had come to love through a poem — that had been , in Drinkwater 's phrase , ‘ lissom in a dream ’ .
12 It was certainly not what undergraduates at Oxford had come to expect from a lecturer .
13 Englishness , as a sense of racial or spiritual identity , had come to function as a stabilizing force within the field of professional English studies , rather than providing the authority for a programme of cultural intervention .
14 Therefore , it is against that back-cloth , that I respond to these orchestrated criticisms and express my views on the man I have come to know as a friend and a very good colleague .
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