Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] come " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 From somewhere below came a great rending and echoing squeal of torn metal .
2 From somewhere below came an enraged crashing and bellowing .
3 The dreams of his youth , when he was a tough , small-time bookie around the dog tracks of London , had long since come true .
4 But my dogs have always , much rather come shopping with me and sit in the , .
5 Like covering plants with layer after layer of old earth ; it 's no wonder the poor things so rarely come up fresh and green .
6 Philip Larkin began as a poet in the tradition of W. B. Yeats , and only slowly came to see that Thomas Hardy , not Yeats , was to be his poetic master .
7 Fume cupboards for those working with gases and solvents only slowly came into laboratories .
8 All right come along Lindy he shouted .
9 All right come here and I sha n't be All right .
10 She felt all right coming down when Sue and the children were there , or when the kitchen was empty , although the suddenly-abandoned look of the room always gave her a shock .
11 Try , come on sit down see if you 've got any more Sit down properly come on .
12 He believed that he got up and felt his feet sink through the floor while the music from down below came up like vapour and was breathed rather than heard .
13 For example , we apparently only came to some understanding of how the heart worked when we had within our conceptual framework the notion of a pump .
14 So his foot went down two steps , and sure enough down came the wardrobe onto his toe and did n't do any damage and then just bounced to the next step down .
15 ‘ You 'd all better come with me , ’ he went on .
16 Manager Howard Kendall ruled Cottee had committed the cardinal sin of having a go at team-mates , so in came Stuart Barlow .
17 So in came James — and he recovered from a jittery start to stamp his authority on an emphatic Liverpool win .
18 The next morning , after I had drunk some coffee and sat for an hour with the first suggestions of boredom stirring inside me , the Feldwebel who had enjoyed the ride in the Mercedes so much came to the door .
19 ‘ I can hardly believe so much came from just two schools — I hate to think what is lying in basements around the country , ’ Alistair said .
20 The teacher can only only come on a Monday morning .
21 In alluding to Ronald Duncan and The Criterion , he was referring to a proposal by Duncan — with whom I had been in correspondence , though I did not meet him until after the war — that I should write for The Townsman ( a magazine which he edited from an ancient mill situated in a valley on the Devon/Cornish border , where I was later to live and write about ) , an article analysing the reasons why The Criterion , after flourishing for seventeen years , had so suddenly come to an end .
22 Sure enough along came a vehicle with its headlights on , a small open staff car with two Germans in it , who stopped to investigate the gesticulating ‘ Arab ’ .
23 Well the French Connection starts on T V at ten o'clock so come and watch that .
24 So long came 1922 and another difficult year .
25 I said that I thought I could just about get my act together sufficiently to come .
26 A quick reminder , many people will know , but a quick reminder and er , if you 've perhaps just come back from holiday yourself , or you 're one of our new listeners , you may not know so I 'll tell you , Douglas Cameron 's Breakfast Call , this very programme , will be breaking new ground at the end of next month .
27 I try to accept my countrymen now , but the proud ones , who are so full of their own self-importance — well , they had better not come near me .
28 Listen , I goes , I do n't care who it was but you better not come and knock for no more because my Mum 's screwing with you .
29 ‘ No , you 'd better not come .
30 I 'd better not come down , ’ said Rachaela .
  Next page