Example sentences of "that [pers pn] comes [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ It 's now a tradition that she comes for the last week of the campaign , ’ he says . |
2 | For some reason or other a believer gets into his head such a wrong idea of God that it comes between him and God or between him and his trusting God . |
3 | In very high winds it is usually better to deliberately let the glider swing into wind so that it comes to a stop facing directly into wind . |
4 | Every time that it comes to capping regulations , those same authorities are blamed and pilloried for the spending for which Ministers have happily claimed the credit . |
5 | Stone seems to think that feminist history would insist on an active campaigning role for women , and this unfortunately causes him also to dismiss the significance of gender as a category for historical analysis on the grounds that it comes with too much ‘ ideological baggage ’ ( p. 12 , n. 19 ) . |
6 | But worse is that it comes at the very moment Davies and Jeff Young , the WRU technical director , and forward-looking others have put into place a representative structure designed to facilitate the flow of full international candidates . |
7 | I see well it 's convenient that it comes at the end of a week 's holiday is n't it ? |
8 | The palazzo looks so much like a 1950s cinema ( or is it a small-town railway station ? ) , with its curves and ornate super-structure , that it comes as a surprise to learn that it is seventeenth-century . |
9 | Boulestin 's writing still seems so fresh and original that it comes as a shock to realize that these happenings occurred over forty years ago , and that his first cookery book Simple French Cooking for English Homes appeared in 1923 . |
10 | No , I mean that it comes as a surprise when you first experience it , and then after that you ca n't change the course of events . |
11 | Yet it is at this point that it comes into sharpest conflict with the cultural and anti-intellectual currents which are rooted in a return to instinctual modes . |
12 | Always pick a flower on the very day that it comes into full bloom , because the process of ageing takes place very rapidly in flowers , and pressing does not rejuvenate them , but only halts the ageing process at the moment of pressing . |
13 | ‘ Conveyance ’ can be proved by describing the thing concerned and in cases of difficulty by showing that it comes within the definition of a conveyance as shown as B ( 3 ) ante . |
14 | More impressive than the print quality , though , is the fact that it comes in a smaller , faster box at no extra cost . |
15 | So could you please reformulate if you so wish , your amendment so that it comes in the appropriate point . |
16 | that it comes in the context of massive university cuts , but I do n't think it 's worth pursuing that very much further . |
17 | ‘ I have to believe that it comes from angels , or spirit beings . ’ |
18 | Again very light ‘ rock ’ this time with smoother edges , and natural in the sense that it comes from Icelandic lava flows . |
19 | Most importantly , Rita , just as she makes her own diagnosis , knows — unlike the professionals — exactly what the ‘ shock ’ is and that it comes from somewhere : |
20 | Both these words were used in medieval times ; and we can understand the word knacker as an equivalent for harness-maker when we learn that it comes from an Icelandic root , knakkr , meaning a saddle . |
21 | If you make the right noises about the wine — it 's on the cards that it comes from the proprietor 's own vineyard — you 're likely to find another bottle on the table gratis … . |
22 | The dictionary states quite clearly that it comes from the United States . |
23 | The problem in this case however is : What is it that it comes after ? |
24 | We gather that he comes from the university where they are now playing the concert . |
25 | Saibol speaks Maa in a way which tells me that he comes from the Kisongo of the Ol Doinyo Lengai , yes ? |
26 | Still , he feels that the waiters know that he comes from Dearborn and they can see that in his cashmere tweed jacket he is sailing under false colours . |
27 | Steve Chapman says that he comes from the Shennington club and Nigel was a member there … he jokes that mansell was a big an idiot as all of them … breaking in the wrong place and that sort of thing |
28 | She says all we know is that he comes from London and he wants to remain anonymous . |
29 | This would seem to cast a burden of proof upon the defendant to establish , on a balance of probabilities , that he comes within the scope of the section , which is in any event couched in very restricted terms . |