Example sentences of "coming [adv] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | John and the rest of the room seemed to be miles away — even my own voice , when I produced it finally , sounded as if it were coming down a long-distance telephone . |
2 | Just coming down a little bit . |
3 | Got ta make cups of tea coming down every half hour . |
4 | Tony Milton and his assistant , thank goodness , were coming down the ninth fairway on an electric buggy . |
5 | You 'll hear it coming down the anal passage |
6 | Dot woke when she heard Gloria coming down the clanky metal steps outside , heard her stumble her way across the room , and then felt herself being pushed to the far side of the bed . |
7 | The old saying that ‘ it 's coming off a broad back ’ is being stretched beyond its limits . |
8 | They are identical in the same way that the articles coming off a well-engineered assembly line are identical . |
9 | Viola would have to give up her career , of course — otherwise she would be coming home the same time as Gina , which would not do at all . |
10 | When one thinks , however , that coming up the Sacred Way one 's first sight of the building would be the corner , the long Gigantomachy stretching in front of one , the combat of the east abutting on it and the seated gods closing the composition at the end , one understands that it is so designed to suit its position ; as the formal archaic structure of the west frieze suits the highly decorated frontally approached entrance-façade . |
11 | She was coming up the central passage between the rows of tables . |
12 | Then she looked behind her and saw a carriage coming up the same hill that she had just climbed , with a man leading the horse . |
13 | She had made her attitude clear enough to her , heaven knows , but here she was , still coming back every other Sunday , year after year , as welcome as the Irish potato blight . |
14 | And coming back the other way . |
15 | But erm , we do seem to be coming out a little bit light . |
16 | In fact , George Every , then a lay brother at Kelham , with whom I had started a correspondence , told me later that Eliot , while praising some individual points , had said that the general impression it gave was of material being put through a machine and coming out the other side more or less as it was before . |