Example sentences of "come [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 A seminar , for example , might come somewhere between the two poles .
3 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 .
4 Well he can er , he can come down to the original reduced figure .
5 It 'll come down to the same thing . ’
6 The company is also predicting European prices will come down to the same level as in the US .
7 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 .
8 When that fury finally broke through , the hand of retribution would come down with the strongest power in the world behind it .
9 ‘ But why should he come down in the dead of night ? ’
10 But a spokesman for the firm which organised the poster campaign said it should come down within the next five days .
11 Well unfortunately if , if I did have a delivery of coal it would come in through the other entrance .
12 ‘ 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 .
13 ‘ Did you see him come in through the back door ? ’
14 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 .
15 And would be seriously undermined by any proposed road that will come in on the western side .
16 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 .
17 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 .
18 So you would like come in to the main entrance and then
19 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 . ’
20 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 .
21 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 . ’
22 There will be need for support in that fashion , and that can satisfactorily come only through the International Monetary Fund .
23 I 've brought him , I 've brought him at half five , because I was at the bus stop , leaning on the lamp-post and it was about twenty five past , and then he did n't come along to the next stop by and it got to twenty five
24 Er er I d I do n't think that we as a panel are necessarily going to ever and and and it may not be our role in fact to do so , to come to a judgement on it , but I would have thought as a matter of common sense , and common agreement , that there should be some er way in which the various parties would come together on the basic demographic statistics and would certainly accept that certain basic projections should be used i in looking forward .
25 The full benefits will come through during the next few years .
26 And the bills will come anyway in the normal way to , to , to the , it 's got pushed into the dike , and it 's gone down afew , it 's got pushed into the dike , and it 's gone down afew y thirty pounds maximum are we agreed ?
27 After a long time I heard him get up and come over to the long wall , near to where I was sitting listlessly in the arm-chair .
28 There are some aspects of our personalities which may not come over in the brief span of an interview , but which those close to us know only too well .
29 Or Jagger would come over from the next hotel and we 'd have late night ‘ looning ’ sessions , and then Angie and I would go off again with Zowie .
30 Whitlock had spent most of the afternoon with them and he 'd come away with the distinct impression that they held him in little regard .
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