Example sentences of "coming [adv prt] [prep] [num] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 I would n't want to be a defender and see him coming on with 20 minutes left after being run ragged by Ian Rush , ’ he said .
2 Above all , we must move junior doctors on to a shift system so that they do not work more than 60 hours , coming down to 56 hours in the most intensive posts .
3 The wife of a Sussex shopkeeper paid a woman 18d ( 7.5p ) in 1760 for coming in for two days , while Eden in 1794 reported that Lincolnshire women who went out to wash earned 6d to 8d ( 2.5 to 3p ) a day .
4 So at least there 's income coming in for three months at the rate of your salary .
5 Medical practices for instance two days beforehand before coming in for three days .
6 Guns and Killing magazine currently rate her as the sixth most dangerous solo outlaw in the Americas , and she is the highest-ranked woman on the list , coming in at thirty-seven places above the Antarctic esperado Ice Kold Katie .
7 This may cut out a certain amount of light , but as there are two windows in one corner , the room has light coming in from two directions and is probably lighter than average anyway .
8 A reminder you 're listening to B B C Radio Oxford and Talking Sport , just coming up to thirteen minutes to six .
9 Jed was coming up to five years old , very bright but also very quiet … so quiet that she worried sometimes , wondering if there were things wrong that he was n't telling her .
10 The time is just coming up to twenty-one minutes past seven o'clock .
11 March eighty nine , well that 's three , coming up to three years then in
12 Coming up for fifteen years old .
13 Yeah , she 's only coming up for six weeks , mm , a monster .
14 Sparta 'll be coming up in five minutes exactly . ’
15 It keeps coming out at 70 SpecMarks , it says .
16 To be able just to walk , or drive , wherever you want ; Christ , I 've been away from all this for less than a week and I feel like somebody coming out after thirty years .
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