Example sentences of "comes to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ( 1.5 ) unc If none of the booleans in IF is true , the process behaves like STOP ( i.e. it comes to a complete halt without terminating ; a process sequentially composed with it is not allowed to start ) .
2 The economy comes to a virtual standstill as the population is forced to turn to print and writing for communication purposes .
3 That sounds downbeat , but the characters are interestingly complex , and the film comes to a life-affirming conclusion .
4 When the route comes to a flat area , a narrow track leads straight on and another heads left , turn right up the steep hill to the prominent summit of Meall a' Bhuachaille — the ‘ hill of the herdsmen ’ .
5 The technique is to crush a diamond , select a splinter that comes to a molecular-sized point , and mount it on a pantograph system .
6 The settings mingled with Maeterlinck and Debussy invisibly ; the whispering wind , echoes and shadows , all the invisible shaping powers in a love tragedy that comes to a cruel climax because of the chattering of an innocent child …
7 This is why , if it ever comes to a fixed choice between freedom and order , wise societies prefer order .
8 Only when the public comes to a fuller understanding of the place of the mentally handicapped in our society , and appreciates what mentally handicapped people are really like and what they can achieve , will real progress be made in their integration back into the society of which they are a part .
9 Bournonville 's Napoli is an absolute feast of Italian styled demi-caractère dance which comes to a superb conclusion during the wedding celebration of the hero and heroine .
10 Within a short space of time the student comes to a gradual understanding of the various patterns of attack .
11 So again that comes to a hundred point six nine .
12 Watkins comes to a similar conclusion , although he argues that the Labour Party 's hostility to working with the Communist Party was the reason for its failure to force the National government to abandon its non-intervention policy .
13 Outhwaite ( 1987 ) comes to a similar conclusion .
14 He comes to a similar conclusion to that of the classical theorists of the nineteenth century : face-to-face contacts are many and multifarious , but they are again secondary , fractionalised and based on only a very partial knowledge of a particular individual .
15 I 'm the one who 'll have a row with the carpark attendant , but when it comes to a real crisis , she 's very tough .
16 He usually comes to a struggling club with nothing to lose but this time he 's been part of the slump .
17 But if you know anyone who comes to a bad end you tend to think over what you said to them , what they said to you . ’
18 Comes to a bad end .
19 it comes to a full trial Mrs Brown hopes the lawyers and judge will be more enlightened than the police .
20 Suddenly it 's all thorns , she comes to a full stop , caught and blind in a thicket of thorns like Abraham 's sacrificial ram .
21 A mile beyond Arnisdale the road comes to a full stop at the crofts of Corran , the last outpost of civilisation ; beyond is a mountain wilderness .
22 Even by definition , Key Stage 4 is a sort of disaster area : the implicit message is that education comes to a full stop at 16 and is the antithesis of what we need .
23 I still feel it is a dangerous proposition to be in and we could end up in a situation where development comes to a full stop .
24 This may , of course , be intentional since there is a 65 kilogram limit on baggage , and this depends on the C of G which requires some careful calculation when it comes to a full load , baggage and fuel .
25 A packed week of time trials , road races , round the houses races , mountain bike events and social occasions comes to a big day on Friday , June 25 , when five separate road races are run over closed roads on the TT course .
26 Have you remarked , where a fast-flowing stream comes to a little fall , how the racing water becomes glassy smooth and under it the long fine threads of the water-weed are drawn along in its still-seeming race , trembling a little , but stretched out in the flow ?
27 When Shaw died in 1950 he was a very rich man — the net value of his estate was eventually assessed at around £6,250,000 in terms of today 's money ; and the closest Holroyd comes to a sustained narrative is in tracing the fate of his various bequests .
28 When it comes to the internal politics of Republican Spain , however , disagreement abounds .
29 a small town murder mystery comes to the small screen .
30 Leadership , as Keane says , ‘ resembles a blind and arrogant monarch when it comes to the real issues ’ .
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