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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Reports began to come in of successful strikes on other vehicles .
2 This may explain its reluctance to come out of four wheel drive .
3 A diminishing few of us will continue to come out of sheer love but many will not , especially the young .
4 One of the most interesting findings to come out of recent research is that the visual system consists of a set of circuits arranged in parallel , rather than an hierarchically organized cascade .
5 BRITAIN 'S athletics selectors were slammed yesterday after persuading Kriss Akabusi to come out of international retirement for one final fling .
6 The plastics and polymers which came into use between the wars were , or were claimed to be , the first man-made strong materials to come out of chemical laboratories and they rather went to the heads of the chemists , who supposed , not unnaturally , that these polymers were strong because they had put them together with strong chemical bonds .
7 Only one good thing to come out of such cold — it kept the bugs from biting .
8 They , they put , we go to er , a little shop in , only a little shop and they have to got into er one at Croydon every Thursday , and he get 's , the manager , he get 's the er , driver 's to come out of head office , and what staff , and he always buys it in bulk and he , he still buys say it 's coca cola say it was ten pence a can
9 That would have to , that would have to come out of any kind of interview with workers in those other groups really .
10 Expecting little good to come out of any country even partially populated by non-Muslims , Ibn Battuta had few expectations of India .
11 Er the , the only good thing to come out of these proposals is that erm that he supports the erm the appearance of the public enquiry and the sale of erm that , that erm he suggests for example that we should try the airports policy consortium , well we dealt that five years ago when we realised that Surrey and it 's surrounding areas were getting their own pressure group organised to make sure that Stansted got all of the flack got all the , got all the few other things as well .
12 ‘ I expect to come out of these games with good results , ’ said Atkinson , before warning about hidden pitfalls in the long run in to the finishing line .
13 cos I want to come out of thick woollies now it is March
14 But BET has the in-depth strength to come out of this recession as a business toughened by adversity .
15 Unofficially , therefore , I am anxious to assist her — and Lord Dacre , I may add — to come out of this coil in the best possible way . ’
16 What he really needed to come out of this marriage smelling of roses was a lucky accident .
17 AT1 : ‘ I did wonder what was going to come out of this review . ’
  Next page