Example sentences of "come [adv] [prep] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | Different parts of the lighting system can come on at different times . |
2 | Erm , we are indeed talking to Health Authority about the matters that were mentioned but can I come on to occupational therapists because I 'm very glad to say that erm we are able to recruit occupational therapists in this county . |
3 | • A new signal at the start of the race told drivers that the red light would come on in five seconds . |
4 | Complaints may come on from suppressed emotions or vexations . |
5 | Complaints may come on from electric changes in the atmosphere . |
6 | I think at the end it must come down to two things ; one basically a change in attitude — we have to come to recognise that we live in a very , very technological society , that most of us were born before man walked on the moon , but the kids in school were born in an age when man had walked on the moon ten years ago and they live in a world which is very scientific , and we have to recognise that — and the other one is practical sense , I think , where we really have to look seriously to in-service training of teachers , a ) and b ) we have to look carefully at the way we train teachers now . |
7 | I think at the end it must come down to two things ; one basically a change in attitude — we have to come to recognise that we live in a very , very technological society , that most of us were born before man walked on the moon , but the kids in school were born in an age when man had walked on the moon ten years ago and they live in a world which is very scientific , and we have to recognise that — and the other one is practical sense , I think , where we really have to look seriously to in-service training of teachers , a ) and b ) we have to look carefully at the way we train teachers now . |
8 | So I do think that the , I do n't think it actually does necessarily come down to glossy brochures , but I think it is a management attitude erm , in terms of mark developing a very much more pro-active marketing approach to going out and competing aggressively in the market place for the contracts . |
9 | One mishap saw a German come down on two parachutes including his reserve . |
10 | The price of organic food can only come down with bigger subsidies to organic farmers . |
11 | If the community can come in for such events , it makes them more comfortable in the building and avoids stigmatisation . ’ |
12 | It can also come in for gastric complaints following intensely hot weather . |
13 | Turning to investment banking and I should just remind you that er , we take fifty percent of Brothers ' profits and ten percent of New York and Paris and given the conditions , given the environment last year , I do n't think need be ashamed of the performance er , although in London the only business to really come in , come in with impressive returns was er , asset trading money , broking and banking . |
14 | Just say the word and we 'll come in with all guns blazing . ’ |
15 | They would come in with different agendas . |
16 | Maybe recording what they 're doing , leading them , and the teacher can come in at appropriate moments to help it along . |
17 | The only way in which this could happen is by chance in a small population : outsiders do come in at long odds . |
18 | They may come in in little pieces , but if the pieces can be stuck together the results usually show inside of their first forty-eight hours . |
19 | We are struggling for a terminal at which trains can come in from all parts of the country , at which there can be an interchange for the continent and at which people can move on relatively quickly . |
20 | Clearly archaeological evidence is insufficient in itself and absolute proof of official connections can come only from epigraphic sources . |
21 | This convergence , however , is some years away and meantime direct influence will come only from modest initiatives with little longterm significance . |
22 | It was recognised that the exclusive pursuit of higher things was very likely to be unremunerative except in certain of the more saleable arts , and even then prosperity would come only in mature years : the poor student or young artist , as private tutor or guest at the Sunday dinner-table , was a recognised subaltern part of the bourgeois family , at any rate in those parts of the world in which culture was highly respected . |
23 | ‘ It 's terrible that all these quacks can come along without proper qualifications , ’ Lipsky complained , forgetting that he himself had set up as a dentist without qualifications , there being as yet no legal requirement for special training as there was for doctors . |
24 | — they should come together at regular intervals and meetings should , if possible , be reckoned as sacrosanct engagements . |
25 | A Swiss Bishop had heard about the project and suggested a plan which is essentially still followed in international meetings : i.e. that representatives of all Eucharist-centred endeavours and activities throughout the world should come together at certain times . |
26 | Why did genes come together into large vehicles , each with a single genetic exit route ? |
27 | The visual impact of wide screen viewing still carries through on a 28in. screen , although it is unlikely that the benefit of wide screen would come through on smaller screens . |
28 | The social dimensions of knowledge can come through in various ways . |
29 | But the most important thing I thought was the thought process I mean just just saying this while you were just going on I just jotted down in the same way you could come off with three ideas that around and I felt that was that was ideal . |
30 | That would come off in two days , she told me , and be replaced by a spatula splint , and yes , she would be on duty on Sunday . |