Example sentences of "[noun sg] have come into " in BNC.

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1 Nizan sided unequivocally with Stalin , noting : " In the USSR only the myths of freedom are dying out , but true freedom has come into being . "
2 A Wolf drill attachment has come into my possession .
3 Against that , though , there is a ‘ vast contemporary repertoire — the guitar has come into its own in popularity in this period , and people are now writing for it with a vengeance .
4 The question of the level of resources that should be invested in Scotland 's underwater heritage has come into focus with the rediscovery of an historic shipwreck off Duart Point in Mull .
5 A new pelican crossing has come into use at the junction of King 's Road and Cromwell Street , North Ormesby .
6 It also sold the existing warehouse at Acton which has been under-used since the main London warehouse has come into operation .
7 New blood has come into the industry , and many of the companies now have the opportunity to become independent production companies .
8 A LITTLE more light has come into the lives of children at a Romanian hospital with the arrival of a BNFL generator which once provided back-up power for Capenhurst 's E21 centrifuge plant .
9 Will he refute the Prime Minister 's suggestion that inward investment has come into Wales as a result of lower personal taxation ?
10 The Third Force has come into the Christian spectrum , and it is a force to be reckoned with .
11 No new blood had come into the affairs of de Chavigny for years : everywhere Edouard found stagnation and apathy .
12 An easy symbiosis had come into being between the cultivated pagan and the educated Christian .
13 Light had come into the world again , even if it was to the accompaniment of tap-dancing elves .
14 But Humphrey and Wobble and Dot have come into their prime .
15 I 'm sure the word divorce has come into my mind er several times at the crisis points but by God 's strength you keep going and you grow .
16 AFTER A FEW HOT SUMMERS , LIGHTWEIGHT , POLYCOTTON CLOTHING HAS COME INTO ITS OWN .
17 Since the silent imposition of cultural boycott , a visual illiteracy has come into being .
18 A week ago a man on the run had come into her house , he had been unkempt , his hair curling thickly about his face , he had not been as well groomed as the man standing before her now , but the breadth of shoulder was the same and something about the dark eyes staring into hers touched a chord .
19 She was not smiling now , but her look was full of a benevolent curiosity , and the soft island voice , with the lilt of the Gaelic moving through it like a gentle sea-swell , warmed me as palpably as if the sun had come into the dim and cluttered little shop .
20 It was since that child had come into the house last night .
21 But the publicity machine had come into operation and nothing would stop it .
22 This body in turn can not compel the tip 's owners to clean up the area until regulations provided for in the 1990 Environmental Protection Act have come into force , which may not be until at least 1993 .
23 After much prayer with ‘ application interview procedure ’ a team has come into formation .
24 If the patient hesitates before each answer , wondering whether or not his imagination has come into play , he will be quite unable to be spontaneous and will in fact break the train of the regression completely , often bringing the session to an end .
25 Whether the parents planted a cedar tree in honour of the occasion , as another custom dictated ( girls only got a pine tree ! ) we do not know , but we can rest assured that the salutation-prayer was made with particular relish for this first son of a first son : ‘ A boy is born into the world ; a blessing has come into the world . ’
26 The lush farmlands of Combsburgh and the main trade of the little town had come into the hands of just a few landlords .
27 But , once a new self-replicating molecule had come into existence , a new kind of cumulative selection could get going .
28 A young lad had come into the shop .
29 She was a very nice girl named Eugena , I think , and there were guards at the end of the hotel corridors , I remember giving them the slip and wandering around Khabarovsk on my own in a snowstorm , only to be told the next day that there was quite a bit of excitement in the city during the night because a Siberian tiger had come into the city and was wandering the streets at the same time I was !
30 One story of how a local university academic had come into the police station to report his car missing , because he had forgotten where he had parked it , was repeated with relish ; while another which I told on my return from university satisfied these deeply held views of the ‘ intellectual 's ’ practical ineptitude :
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