Example sentences of "[noun pl] have come [adv prt] with " in BNC.
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1 | The poor duck must have crawled all that way , a hundred metres or more to that second patch of light ; our bright idea of putting the branches down after him to cover him up was pointless ; for all these years it would only have needed some more kids to have come along with torches or bits of burning paper to discover the body . |
2 | The words had come out with a distinct tang of broad Lancashire , but she immediately withdrew into her pseudo-Southern gentility . |
3 | After only getting 7 points compared to my target of 10 from the first 6 games , the lads have come back with 14 from the next 6 . |
4 | In an attempt to cure this problem ( and sell more skegs ) the manufacturers have come out with a number of ingenious shapes . |
5 | Up and down the country , Opposition Front-Benchers have come out with protestations about what they will give this , that and the other interest group ; the document will make clear the order of priorities , and will begin to explain how the expenditure will be paid for . |
6 | So — the magnitude of Maria 's feelings is given to us because Duras has come up with another jealous person , whose jealousy was great enough to provoke him to murder . |
7 | One-colour borders have been enjoying renewed popularity recently , and Mr Fothergill 's Seeds has come up with the perfect quick answer to monochrome gardening . |
8 | Banks have come up with a development of their IOR Checkmate sails , which were Kevlar and Mylar , and now build CHS Checkmate sails in a special Dacron fabric developed in the UK ; they carry no CHS penalty . |
9 | BIOTECHNOLOGISTS have come up with a surprising new way of repairing many scars and wrinkles — using purified cow-hide . |
10 | All in all , state ownership and state intervention with prices has come out with a generally , but not totally , bad record . |
11 | Recently the neurochemists have come up with a set of toxins which appear to be fairly effective in destroying only cell bodies , leaving axons intact ( Kohler et al . |
12 | Recognising the problem , district councillors have come up with a much needed cash injection to ease the crisis . |
13 | Following new yarn developments in France , Charnos have come up with a beautiful lustrous leg look that is built for comfort — ‘ Sheer Lustre ’ tights at £2.99 with 10 denier appearance leg . |
14 | A group of US magazine publishers have come up with a novel weapon for the US Information Agency 's propaganda efforts in Eastern Europe : their unsold magazines . |
15 | There are structural difficulties and the Council of Ministers has come up with a typical measure — just finding a few extra bob to see whether it will solve the problem . |
16 | Other people and think-tanks had come up with a similar recipe before and never had much impact . |
17 | To celebrate the November Presidential election two galleries have come up with national election year shows . |
18 | Meanwhile state-owned energy monopolies have come up with their own solution to generating more electricity without angering local environmentalists : moving their power stations to Eastern Europe . |
19 | ‘ This is the model our analysts have come up with for the development of our leisure interests over the next few years . |
20 | Investment analysts have come up with the following forecasts for earnings growth : |
21 | Archaeologists have come up with data at Dorestad , the trading emporium through which the Carolingian court had been supplied , showing protracted decline with , allegedly , a sharp downturn c. 830 . |
22 | Marr and his colleagues have come up with a simpler explanation which relies on the fact that there are two classes of ganglion cells , on-centre and off-centre . |