Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb mod] come [prep] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If you are a writer , the majority of your income may come from performances of your music either on the radio , the television or at live concerts .
2 According to the testimony of Abbess Aelfflaed , it was Aldfrith 's dying wish that his successor should come to terms with Wilfrid ( Vita Wilfridi , ch. 59 ) .
3 Some revenue for the programme may come from taxes on carbon dioxide emissions , assuming that present proposals to introduce them become law .
4 Silk Slippers may not enable Sangster to challenge the Arab supremacy , but an English Classic success after a five-year gap would come like manna from heaven .
5 Most of the revenue would come from credits from the National Bank of Yugoslavia , as republican contributions had fallen significantly .
6 Premium income in currency was up nearly 17% as a result of substantial rate increases and further rating action will come into effect during the third quarter .
7 ‘ This kind of assistance must come from governments in the form of low interest loans and interest payment subsidies , ’ he says .
8 But by the same token , theories like that proposed by Pearce and Hall must come to terms with the evidence that has been taken to show that what the stimulus is predicted by can also play a role .
9 The bill , which makes it an offence to carry a knife and puts the onus on the carrier to prove he had good reason to carry the knife , will have its third reading on Friday and could now become law before summer after the Scottish Office accepted a Labour amendment that the act should come into force on the day it is passed rather than at the end of a two month period .
10 In this context , the youngster must come to terms with his or her changing and changed body ; must try out the precepts , attitudes and ideals of childhood against the demands of the transitional and later groups among which existence now lies ; must establish himself or herself as an individual with rights and responsibilities and with a unique and largely self-determinant personality ; and must cope with feelings and impulses which have previously been only of the vaguest and most unformulable nature .
11 Exactly how architecture might come to terms with the invisible is a tricky subject , which Sudjic hints at but does not elaborate .
12 Meanwhile Tess was not hopeful that Angel would come in answer to her letter .
13 However , the most likely way that people at work will come into contact with microelectronics ' technology is in the area of ‘ information technology ’ .
14 THE Security Service Act will come into force on December 18 , Mr David Waddington , Home Secretary , announced in a written answer .
15 THE Security Service Act will come into force on December 18 , Mr David Waddington , Home Secretary , announced in a written answer .
16 These feelings … may diminish in time so that the parent can come to terms with the fact that the baby has Down 's Syndrome .
17 The Apex conference must come to terms with the nature of that amalgamation and that said that the Apex conference would concern itself with matters of interest to white collar workers .
18 Existing satellite television legislation was due to expire on Dec. 31 ; the new directive would come into effect from Jan. 1 , 1992 , and expire in 1998 .
19 The surplus will come from things like property development , financial services and the US electrical offshoot , Silo : the 350 Dixons and 600 Currys outlets are losing money .
20 The decree will come into effect at other European operations by the end of January .
21 They are keenly aware the BMA leadership could come under attack from its rank and file .
22 He suffered a desperate need of heat , and on occasion would come to school with a great hole in the back calf of his trousers , surrounded by scorch marks .
23 The new name would come into use after the adoption of the new constitution [ for its publication in June 1991 see p. 38290 ] .
24 Had the sellers known , they could have predicted that perhaps water would come into contact with the contents of an ampoule and cause an explosion .
25 Molly understood that water would come by lorry during the afternoon or at least by the evening .
26 We must remember that there was no compulsory army conscription in Britain — compulsion in schools was bad enough , and standing armies had long been anathema to the ‘ freeborn Englishman ’ — and it was not until the years following the Second World War that compulsory national service would come into existence in peace-time Britain .
27 Near the boneyard , there was an old boneyard , it 's the road that runs through from Church , there were no houses there then , it 's all built on now , and there was a sl like a lane used to come from Church to Forrest .
28 We ought perhaps , however , to add a remark or two about the cornet , as the student may come across scores into which that instrument has found its way ( e.g. Bizet 's Carmen , Stravinsky 's Petrushka , Vaughan Williams 's ‘ London ’ Symphony , Elgar 's Cockaigne Overture ) .
29 A woman would come from time to time and take my money and bring me clothes and food .
30 This code will come into effect on 1st March 1993 .
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