Example sentences of "we come " in BNC.

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1 As we progress up the scale of profit-taking , we find others who sell at small craft fairs and those who find an outlet through local shops , until we come at last to the favoured few who sell at the prestigious crafts fairs which Hugh prefers .
2 At such moments we come as close as it is possible to get to the spirit of Crime and Punishment .
3 When we come to whip and dipole antennas , Gameson criticises the whip for not being directional and the dipole for being directional !
4 Later in the canto ( 107/757–58 ) we come upon :
5 So we come back around the circle to the capital side of the balance of payments , and the operationally interesting question : for how long can we expect the world 's savers to make up our domestic shortage ?
6 Now we come to the grey sections .
7 Then we come to Sir Geoffrey Howe , the third contender .
8 Why the hell do you think we come ? ’ — Blackpool woman representative queuing to enter the conference headquarters hotel in the small hours ‘ I 'm bound to say that when considering some examples of modern architecture I enthusiastically join those who say , ‘ God bless the Prince of Wales ’ . '
9 For the domestic scenes — and these include the most moving Slaughter of the Macduffs sequence I have seen — we come right back to European naturalism .
10 Yes we are , we come here and play games and watch TV and all .
11 When we come to look in detail at the Nikol'skaia peasantry in 1922 , many of these inhibiting features will become more evident .
12 All of us stand up watching as we come out of the theatre and Alfred glance up at we .
13 I think in the long view it is all to the good that the government have to look after their own chickens as they come home to roost , and get a lot of the dirt cleared before we come in .
14 We go the long way ; who knows how long it will be before we come this way again ?
15 Normally our machines are oiled before we come in .
16 We come from different backgrounds , from the point of view of our upbringing and our education , and approach our racing in different ways . ’
17 I here s about ten people when we come in , sitting on the floor .
18 With Jack , however , things were less simple ; we come once more to Barfield 's worry that there was something affected about the younger brother 's attitudes and poses .
19 Now in the heart of the decoration area of Bath , stretching from the London Road to the end of Walcot Street , we come on Penny Philip whose small shop is a shrine to period textiles : toile de Jouy , Scandinavian bedlinens and shawls are displayed on decorative iron furniture .
20 ‘ We do n't come here for economic reasons — we come here to seek life . ’
21 When we come to the West , it 's like Christmas — so many shops , so much to buy .
22 Input/Tim Radford We come to hit hypocrites with a brick , not to praise them .
23 We 're articulate enough to fool ourselves that we 're nice people , but there 's a strong undercurrent to our thinking that encourages us to view people with a disability as lesser , and until we come to terms with that , we will never have a proper support system .
24 Morrissey ascended a paranoiac spiral of statesmanship ( paranoia is inverted narcissism ) — check the progression from ‘ Panic ’ through The World Wo n't Listen and Louder Than Bombs , to Strangeways Here We Come .
25 Learning from experience which things help or hinder the blood 's motion , we come to develop appetites and aversions ; we come to hope for what produces pleasure , and to fear what produces pain .
26 Learning from experience which things help or hinder the blood 's motion , we come to develop appetites and aversions ; we come to hope for what produces pleasure , and to fear what produces pain .
27 Once we have them , our reason considers them and we come to see that wholes are equal to the sum of their parts , or that all numbers are even or odd .
28 His arguments against innateness have their complement , not in Book 2 , but in Book 4 , where he explains how we come to have knowledge by reasoning about our ideas .
29 ‘ Our senses … do convey into the mind , several distinct perceptions of things … and thus we come by those ideas we have of yellow , white , [ etc . ] ’
30 It is by ‘ perceiving ’ these relations between ideas that we come to have knowledge .
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