Example sentences of "come [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The gayer , shorter girls would come on for a general dance to the Gavotte . |
2 | His reappearance in 2010 decisively resolves this , at the cost of making him come on like a Californian religious freak about ‘ something wonderful ’ . |
3 | Dyspnoea ; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation , a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep , a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck ; neck is very sensitive to touch . |
4 | A seminar , for example , might come somewhere between the two poles . |
5 | After all the years in which we pressed British Rail to open the station and the bus company to allow buses to come down into Portlethen village , when the station was reopened , the bus companies suddenly decided that buses would come down off the main road and start a service to compete with British Rail . |
6 | Well he can er , he can come down to the original reduced figure . |
7 | It 'll come down to the same thing . ’ |
8 | The company is also predicting European prices will come down to the same level as in the US . |
9 | I make no impression on it and all the time I am afraid that its flapping tail will come down on the taut line and snap it like a dry twig . |
10 | ‘ You can come down for a nice sit in me kitchen , ’ said Mrs Beavis . |
11 | When that fury finally broke through , the hand of retribution would come down with the strongest power in the world behind it . |
12 | ‘ But why should he come down in the dead of night ? ’ |
13 | Well it 's a question of balance I I the forty one thousand figure in my view should come down by a few thousand to reflect constraints in specific areas , I wo n't go into that now cos it 's a separate discussion later on . |
14 | But a spokesman for the firm which organised the poster campaign said it should come down within the next five days . |
15 | Well unfortunately if , if I did have a delivery of coal it would come in through the other entrance . |
16 | ‘ Make foreign things work for China ’ , ran one slogan but it recognised that ‘ flies and pests ’ would come in through the open door as well as fresh air to revitalise the stuffy atmosphere in China . |
17 | ‘ Did you see him come in through the back door ? ’ |
18 | You add up all the bills you know will come in over the next year — plus a bit more for contingencies — and divide by twelve . |
19 | At the present pace of progress in Brussels , similar changes throughout the EC may not come in for a dozen years or more , and British farmers fear that they will lose business while waiting for European competitors to catch up . |
20 | Do you think I might come in for a few minutes and talk to you about Matilda ? ’ |
21 | If we 're looking at the question of services coming together to deal with the emergency erm obviously I suppose the army and that will come in on a voluntary basis which but it might be necessary to see where someone could be authority to coordinate the services and bring it whatever is required . |
22 | And would be seriously undermined by any proposed road that will come in on the western side . |
23 | Other potential candidates , who were remaining loyal to Ted but who it was known would come in on the second ballot if Ted were defeated , were quietly being accused of cowardice by the Neave camp . |
24 | Various sidings , er and the trains from would come in to the left hand side of the top platform , erm and er would er go over here and and cut back and go out from this er this side . |
25 | So you would like come in to the main entrance and then |
26 | I do n't exclude myself from myself , but I I I 'd give him a nine and I I 'd come in at a seven I think . |
27 | Just turn everything up , ’ and I said to the drummer , ‘ Get out there and start drumming the intro to Hot For Teacher and I 'll come in at the appropriate moment . ’ |
28 | There 's been talk of seventeen and a half per cent being added to food , to public transport and to books and its now believed that VAT on domestic fuel , which was to have been introduced in stages may come in at the full rate in the spring . |
29 | But it could always of course come in as an odd . |
30 | As a thought struck him he dropped on to his hunkers again and whispered quickly , ‘ They could come in by the far gate and force their way into the back of the crees : they 're only planked . ’ |