Example sentences of "that it comes " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 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 .
2 Discussing a book on Dostoevsky , he remarks that while the author has much of interest to say about The Idiot ‘ she does not quite persuade one that it comes off , indeed she does not really try , because like many scholars today she is more concerned with showing how the thing works than with judging if it works well . ’
3 The irony of Mr Skinner 's re-regulation of the airline industry , say Wall Street analysts , is that it comes after the shake-out among domestic carriers has taken place and serves only to reinforce the advantages enjoyed by the surviving majors .
4 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 ) .
5 It says something for the delicacy of the proposal that it comes not from the Japanese government , but from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party .
6 For a painter in the 1990s to attempt this sort of transcendent landscape is rather startling , and , frankly , I am not at all sure that it comes off .
7 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 .
8 ‘ I have to believe that it comes from angels , or spirit beings . ’
9 These are both recommendable performances : the Monte-Carlo orchestra , in particular , is on top form , and plays this familiar music for all its worth , so that it comes up as fresh as it must have sounded in St. Petersburg a century ago .
10 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 .
11 We have become so used to thinking of Günter Wand as a conductor who specialises exclusively in the late 18th and 19th Century symphonic repertoire that it comes as something of a shock to find him performing a wide variety of works of more contemporary lineage .
12 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 .
13 Again very light ‘ rock ’ this time with smoother edges , and natural in the sense that it comes from Icelandic lava flows .
14 Divide mixture between tins , so that it comes up to the same level in both .
15 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 .
16 ‘ 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 .
17 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 .
18 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 .
19 You should also call the dog to you when you are wearing the slippers and , assuming that it comes readily to you , make a fuss of it .
20 Add a length of plastic pipe over the top of the funnel so that it comes up to the top of the bottle .
21 It is only through feminist psychology 's attention to work like Ladner 's Afrocentric sociology , that it comes to consider specific features of black girls ' socialization in their families and communities ( Williams 1979 ) .
22 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 :
23 In defence of Maxim 's interpretation , it should be said that it comes closer than usual to the notated metronome marks .
24 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 .
25 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 .
26 Again , the main technique is of modifying the structure of the face-to-face interview so that it comes to resemble , in certain respects , a conversation .
27 Some stars will become so small that their gravitational fields will bend light to that point that it comes back toward the star .
28 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 .
29 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 … .
30 Reality Therapy involves confronting the sufferer with the reality of life as perceived by others and helping him or her gradually to change the perception of how life should be so that it comes nearer to how life actually is .
  Next page