Example sentences of "was to come [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The regiment was to come under the Director of Military Operations who would exercise control through a new department to be known as G ( Raiding Forces ) ( G(RF) ) . |
2 | Worse was to come with the news that the gentleman had brought no valet , his usual man having fallen ill . |
3 | He was also proud to announce that the Barnes Wallis Collection was to come to the Museum and would make a major exhibition . |
4 | So Lilian was informed that she was to come to the dentist for an examination . |
5 | After Jesus feeds the Five Thousand the crowd respond by declaring , ‘ Surely this is the Prophet who was to come into the world ! ’ |
6 | When Professor Tidy sat down , worse was to come for the defendants , as a plethora of witnesses placed every permutation of the four in or about the vicinity at various times that evening . |
7 | Which duty would prevail if a dispute was to come before the courts ? |
8 | In Canada , Siberia , and the Far East , in the trans-Andean regions of Latin America and in Africa , the heroic building period was to come in the years when the railways stood on the threshold of being overtaken by new transportation developments , the internal combustion engine and later the aeroplane . |
9 | This set would be just a taste of what was to come in the wedding dower , a tantalising taste of the jewels that would eventually be showered on the bride . |
10 | There was plenty , not about the past but what was to come in the future . |
11 | So within a few days of his grudging acceptance by his parliamentary colleagues , Law 's leadership was ratified by the throng of party notables at Leeds ; here he received a reception more typical of what was to come in the future . |
12 | The general reaction among his staff was stunned silence , then surprise at the extent of the change and suspicion over what was to come in the future . |
13 | Since I find novelists tend to say it better than sociologists , let me quote from one who seems to have anticipated a good deal of what was to come after the period when we had never had it so good : |
14 | From its first policy statement it was clear that the initiatives for college courses and development was to come from the institutions themselves . |
15 | Her chief satisfaction was to come from the friends she later made from the worlds of music , art and literature . |
16 | After she and John had done so much to guard against the enemy without , the fatal wound was to come from the friend within . |
17 | Given the wide diversity of views within the Council about the nature of economic cooperation , let alone its political implications , it was not surprising that if anything positive was to come from the idea , it would be little more than a minimalist option . |
18 | Barbara insisted that in keeping with the period the only light was to come from the candles , which flickered romantically from the walls and the three Bohemian crystal chandeliers on the ceiling . |