Example sentences of "[noun] come and go " in BNC.
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1 | And over the past five years , they 've brought in experts to watch the families of pipitrelles and brown long eared bats come and go . |
2 | One by one speakers come and go until , at last , it is my turn . |
3 | Aircraft come and go all day long ( with the exception of the afternoon 's flying display ) and moving aircraft in among the viewing public seems to be accomplished with the minimum of fuss . |
4 | Amy Brennan 's seen cleaning methods come and go over thirty years of service |
5 | The horse stabled in a shed or barn can not see people , cars , and animals come and go ; or a cat or dog wandering by , birds flying , the wind in the grass and trees , and so on . |
6 | My periods come and go . |
7 | You were John Mayall 's longest-serving side man , and must have seen a good few guitarists and drummers come and go … |
8 | How could sea ice come and go so quickly ? |
9 | UniSoft expects to be able to carry on making money out of contracts to port the various flavours of Unix — and their associated testing mechanisms — to and from different architectures as companies come and go and change development strategies . |
10 | Youngsters come and go , but the older workers , with their family responsibilities , stay on . |
11 | New international links are planned to help foreign workers come and go . |
12 | Boats come and go at the waterfront |
13 | Rivera is just a conduit through which the messages come and go , but what if Vargas is something else ? ’ |
14 | Overall , though , most individuals survive with a good enough attachment pattern established in early life , and from then on attachments and separations come and go as the span of life develops . |
15 | Compared to states or executives , governments tend to be of short duration — state institutions often remain in existence for long periods and officials in the executive may have lifelong careers , while governments come and go ( although some of their personnel may hold office in more than one government ) . |
16 | Although Governments come and go , governance in the civil service sector of this country continues untainted . |
17 | In large transient hotels it is not practical to confirm in writing every reservation , as guests come and go at short notice . |
18 | Silly feeling , but you know how these weird ideas come and go in your head sometimes . |
19 | The ones who fail vanish from royal favour as quickly as the Highland mists come and go . |
20 | From the Hotel Cavalletto you look out on the most typical of Venetian scenes , as here the public rooms are bordered by a narrow waterfront where gondoliers come and go with their passengers . |
21 | The other co , other things come and go but |
22 | And of course because mathematics is n't directly attached to anything else , any other subject area , it can follow the whims of individual researchers , so at that level things come and go . |
23 | Pounds come and go at Paisley |
24 | And as Rex and Khai Eng , still thriving in an area which has seen plenty of other vegetarian establishments come and go , get ready to enter their second decade , perhaps we 'll leave the last word to Rex : |
25 | Films like dreams come and go and are soon forgotten , yet King Kong , which I must have seen in 1933 , or early 1934 , with its scenes of adventure in a fabled land , was the one to overwhelm my mind and stay with me to the present day . |
26 | Neologisms come and go very quickly in spoken language but tend to be less frequent in writing . |
27 | They 've seen teaching machines come and go . |
28 | While waiting we watched a small number of trusted prisoners in ragged white cotton shirts , shorts and head-dress come and go apparently freely through the outer gate , engaged in errands or in work in the nearby gardens . |
29 | Businesses come and go with alarming frequency . |
30 | Trade marks are especially important in a fast-moving industry and it is very comforting to buy goods with familiar names when so many products and businesses come and go in rapid succession , as happened with microcomputers in the early 1980s . |