Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] it come " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | For instance , in the Finale Paray drives the music very hard from start to finish , with the result that it comes over as something genuinely exciting as well as grand and loud . |
2 | ‘ It was then that they released the Wheel and it came bowling down the hill not more than ten yards from where I was standing . |
3 | I see no earthly reason why we should shackle British Rail in providing a better service still in terms of safety and speed if it comes into conflict with those who want to walk across the line . |
4 | Gemmell just kept in by Crosby and it comes again to Gemmell . |
5 | oh , she could n't make up her mind and it come out squircles |
6 | I had been very naive when we started out in Rotherham and it came as a shock to me to realize that not everyone can see the justness of a just cause . |
7 | Black spots will appear on silver if it comes into contact with dry dishwasher powder . |
8 | It was his first experience of such blatant prejudice and it came as a shock . |
9 | With your neck if it come out at a forty that 'll be fine wo n't it ? |
10 | It 's , it 's really stocking stitch cos it came from the stocking machine did n't it ? |
11 | They 're grown on my neighbours fence and it comes on to my path . |
12 | You can get to us , you can get on at the ba , at the baths and it comes up past Park and you get off , you get off at the end of Wickham Avenue |
13 | And I rung for an ambulance and it came and we took her up and sat with her , and they kept her in for four days . |
14 | It is the first occasion that Basquiat 's art will have been studied by an American institution and it comes at a time when David Ross , who replaced Thomas Armstrong as the Whitney 's director in bitter circumstances nearly two years ago , is under considerable pressure to ignite a new and visionary exhibition programme at the museum ( see The Art Newspaper No.6 , March 1991 , p.5 ) . |
15 | Formed in 1918 in Waco , Texas , the squadron had several American homes before it came over to England as part of NATO — moving to Upper Heyford in 1970 . |
16 | What I was if any other matter comes into light before it comes in we do n't do anything about it and that 's why I would oppose that because of this because one it 's not necessary to move something that we would look at it and sit back and after the inspector reports . |
17 | Can do , it can take several months before it comes out . |
18 | So you can hardly expect me to share your rose-tinted spectacles when it comes to marriage . ’ |
19 | That 'll be a good dictionary when it comes out . |
20 | Not short of a pound when it came to putting clothes on her back , I can tell you … ’ |
21 | In other words , pre-exposure to the stimulus may both retard the acquisition of the CS-US association and act to interfere with the retrieval of the information embodied in this association when it comes to a test trial . |
22 | It had to be a British car , of course , since Pringle 's did so much business with the local automotive industry — not that Vic has ever driven a foreign car : foreign cars are anathema to him , their sudden invasion of British roads in the 1970s marked the beginning of the region 's economic ruin in his view — but he has to admit that you do n't have a lot of choice in British cars when it comes to matching the top-of-the-range Mercedes and BMWs . |
23 | Dinah had not called , and had drunk the tea when it came ; after that , she began to have sharp pains in the small of the back . |
24 | More accurate performance feedback as it comes from a number of sources |
25 | I suppose if you put all this together you would say I 'm not exactly the archetypal Mills & Boon tall dark stranger when it comes to courting girls . |
26 | Above all he turned his anger towards Kenamun , who , on grounds of security , had forbidden Huy to visit the scene of the third murder when it came to light , where he might have had a chance at last of studying the circumstances of death . |
27 | It seems if you 're a clown you can get away with murder when it comes to cars — forget about roadworthiness , do n't bother with tax discs , ignore MOTs . |
28 | In the past it was invariably the leading Americans who seemed to have more grit or nerve when it came to the closing stretch . |
29 | I wish shops would have more uniformity when it comes to sizing guides . |
30 | ‘ You see … you ca n't beat a veteran when it comes to the crunch . ’ |