Example sentences of "[noun sg] will come to " in BNC.

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1 A horse should be able to feel safe and secure in its own stable : it needs a ‘ safe-house ’ where it knows no harm will come to it .
2 Of course no harm will come to him .
3 Trust always involves risk by others , even though in all schools children are occasionally injured in accidents and some children bullied , parents , on the whole , have absolute trust that teachers will see that no harm will come to their child .
4 ‘ Follow me and no harm will come to thy sheep ’ , the Emperor replied , and taking him by the hand led him into a cave in the side of the mountain .
5 Trained volunteer subjects who have experienced the stimuli many times and therefore know that no harm will come to them , can give reliable measures of the strength of the stimulus in terms of the strength of their pain perception .
6 No harm will come to them and they will recommence feeding as the temperature begins to fall .
7 I do not feel that any harm will come to those people who experience spontaneous regression in such a way , as any group involved in the higher levels of meditation should be under the control of a qualified and experienced teacher or leader who will be on hand to control the situation and to help should the pupil find himself in emotional difficulty .
8 I know that no harm will come to me — and so would you if you could only see him .
9 If you truly believe in Arnold Bros ( est. 1905 ) , no harm will come to you ! ’
10 We know that a car will come to a grinding halt if we put water in the petrol tank , so no one in their right mind does it !
11 In fact those worries are unfounded and the pond will come to no harm while they are enjoying themselves .
12 ‘ But I do n't think relocation will come to a halt .
13 As grant aid will come to the Council as additional capital consents , further interest charges will be incurred and so will reduce any net benefit to the capital budget .
14 There 's no news from Washington on whether the president will come to Oxford to receive his degree .
15 Fifthly and finally , anyone reacting to a significant loss will come to a time of acceptance .
16 If the child is a ward of court the wardship will come to an end ( s91(4) ) .
17 — and preferably more — of the hull and interior construction work will come to United Kingdom shipyards ?
18 The possibility of close identification will come to the reader as in a series of tiny hints , the way your hero looks at what comes before him , the exact tone in which he answers the people he meets .
19 But Joyce has never stopped believing that peace will come to the grim back streets of Belfast .
20 But at least the fusion community needs such volumes to remind it that at the end of the day the scientific juggling will come to nothing if it does not lead to a convenient and not too expensive source of electricity .
21 But that reform will come to late for Katherine Colgrave .
22 Frequently , senior executives are offered a termination package deal at the time when they are first told that it is likely or unavoidable that their job will come to an end .
23 A further circumstance in which the obligation of confidence will come to an end is where an express provision of limited duration expires .
24 The mayor said ‘ I hope a celebrity will come to the show ’ [ peace ]
25 The ‘ offer ’ probability may be treated as the product of ( i ) the probability that a vacancy will come to the individual 's notice and ( ii ) the probability that the individual , if available , will be ‘ offered ’ the job .
26 If Hong Kong were to decline , he said , " then perhaps some of the business will come to Singapore , but on the whole that would be far the second-best choice " .
27 He told the Conservative local government conference : ’ In time I believe the community charge will come to be accepted for what it is ; simple , straightforward , and , above all fair . ’
28 It may even be that the indiscriminacy of some of the air operations in the Second World War will come to be seen as something of a historical aberration , and a mere temporary consequence of the undeveloped state of the arts of target acquisition and guidance .
29 ‘ I do n't think Francis ever made a will so I suppose his share will come to me . ’
30 Whether this will in practice make a great difference may be doubted , since it seems unlikely that a court will come to the conclusion that a chief constable of police has come to a decision that he could not reasonably arrive at , which is the critical test for the exercise of the powers of judicial review .
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