Example sentences of "come in [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I suppose my shadow calculated that I would soon come in off the streets , or perhaps he was using the opportunity to go through my baggage . |
2 | You ca n't come in over the top , you must come underneath to get children 's attention . ’ |
3 | Well Miss rang me up about twenty to nine and said could I come in for the day and I said you 've had it for the day though consider the afternoon . |
4 | And the other one , seeing as it was like September October , getting cold , my mum said well the bed 's empty , you might as well come in for the winter and stay here . |
5 | Cosmas 's body is laid out and his poor brother will come in for the death vigil . |
6 | Although tankers did not come in for the attention they received in the 1980s , on 25 January Platt 's carried an account of an attack on an Iraqi tanker by US aircraft . |
7 | ‘ It was arranged that Mrs. Kennedy would come in on the Monday to execute this charge too . |
8 | Lucy will come in on the Wednesday . |
9 | Lucy will come in on the Wednesday . |
10 | And sometimes Madame would just decide that we all needed a change and there 'd be paint ordered and people would come in during the day and work for a couple of days and the whole place would be done out for a party or a festival . |
11 | Users of telecottages are given the key and people can use them at any time , which means that women can come in during the evening , early in the morning or whatever . ’ |
12 | Well , they can come in to the church , as many of them do , erm and I just say to them well , you know , do you respect this place and fine , it 's a place where we do n't chuck anybody out who comes into church for all sorts of reasons during the day when the church is open , you know , people come in , and there are many people like the ones we 've been talking about , who are in desperate need , and we just ask them to respect certain fairly mild rules they can always go out in the churchyard and smoke , but in the building itself we say no smoking and no drinking . |
13 | Well that will come in to the meeting as well . |
14 | But I would have liked to have got the napkins to match , but she said they do n't come in with the napkins . |
15 | There was a lot of talk but of course you always had these people who sons and that in the army , and they would always come in with the war situation . |
16 | Well do n't come in with the coat tomorrow please or after Easter . |
17 | Now , may I stop there then , and if Mr can come in with the detail . |
18 | It went on to make two historic recommendations : that the Institution should give more overt support to the Society of Surveying Technicians , formed in 1970 by the General Council of the RICS , pointing out that the notion that the profession needed persons with technical qualification to ‘ come in at the bottom ’ and stay there was insensitive to human aspirations and naïve in its recognition of the Society 's worth ; and that practitioners should henceforth be required to undertake structured Continuing Professional Development ( CPD ) — a courageous and necessary proposal ( see below ) . |
19 | Unix vendor Sequent Computer Systems Inc last week announced details of a new line of symmetric multprocessing systems running Microsoft Corp 's Windows NT operating system which will come in at the low-end of its product range . |
20 | The LX is a graphical box with 16-bit audio and ISDN which will come in above the Classic , a sub-$5,000 offering that lacks some of its cousin 's functionality . |
21 | Because she 's trying to push m multiplication in , that does n't come in till the juniors . |
22 | And who else could come in by the laboratory door from the street ? |
23 | Civil and Public Services Association chief Barry Reamsbottom told the unions ' Blackpool conference : ‘ We 're stuck in a time-warp and must come in from the cold . ’ |
24 | But 20 years have at least seen her interests come in from the cold . |
25 | But clearly the it forms two purposes , one is to remove the er the through traffic but also it it forms a purpose of redistribution of the traffic such that er there are er benefits er of getting er traffic off the A sixty one which for example is headed for the for the northern part of Harrogate and that that can come in from the South , it can go up to the A fifty nine and then come back into the northern part of Harrogate without having to pass through the centre of Harrogate . |
26 | MATT EDWARDS used the Coca-Cola Cup to finally come in from the wilderness last night . |
27 | Have I said I 've said those would come in from the departments . |
28 | I 'd just come in from the garden and kicked my wellies off when it happened . ’ |
29 | More gardens to the left , so it would make sense to suppose that you 'd come in from the right , leaving your car in the road at the end of the row . |
30 | They were scared of the dogs that had been bitten and strayed : scared that the jackals , gone mad , would come in from the forest and molest them in packs . |