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

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1 I 'll come in the morning instead or whatever , erm but quite often it means if they 're coming in they say , well I 'll be in town anyway I 'll come in for that hour
2 If the community can come in for such events , it makes them more comfortable in the building and avoids stigmatisation . ’
3 Badawi romped home in an Ascot ladies race last time and looks the best bet of the day in the opener at the Lancashire track , while Young Buster will come in for strong support in the Rose of Lancaster Stakes after his defeat of Twist And Turn at Doncaster .
4 And I thought well , even if it was a voucher for pads or owt , I mean , they 'll come in for either Lianne
5 The peasants in the Roslavl' region did come in for some attention during 1922 , though supervision was at best paternalistic , sporadic , and myopic .
6 It can also come in for gastric complaints following intensely hot weather .
7 And if I might just come in on this thing that 's always thrown up against Mrs. Thatcher about her rejoice , she said rejoice when South Georgia had been retaken and the rejoice was because it appeared to have been done without any casualties — that was what she was rejoicing for , not the victory erm
8 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 .
9 Just say the word and we 'll come in with all guns blazing . ’
10 It should rise above the personality cults that will come in with religious advertising on television .
11 Very soon , someone would come in with uncomplicated news of the day ; someone ordinary , a nuclear physicist or a brain surgeon .
12 They would come in with different agendas .
13 Maybe recording what they 're doing , leading them , and the teacher can come in at appropriate moments to help it along .
14 The only way in which this could happen is by chance in a small population : outsiders do come in at long odds .
15 ‘ They are all very obliging and will come in at any time . ’
16 The White House wants to see stations that could come in at either $5 billion , $7 billion or $9 billion over the next five years .
17 It can only come in as some kind of ‘ emergent property ’ of all these causal interactions .
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 Several of the changes Mr Major announced will not come in until next year , and their effects will hardly be noticed for a while after that .
20 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 .
21 The imposition of 8 per cent VAT on domestic fuel and a 1 per cent increase in employees ' NI contribution to 10 per cent will come in from next April , with a further hefty rise in the fuel VAT rate to 17 per cent planned for 1995 .
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