Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb mod] come [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Chocolate Rich Tea will come in thick plain or real milk chocolate and cost 69p for a 250gr pack .
2 Well I mean , the , the the irony is , if you look in the Brigade 's statistics chart , the one that 's attached to that one , the aeroplane crash would come under special service calls other so it 's a miscellaneous column , so it 's not even a road accident , it 's some other .
3 You you 're chance will come in due course sir when we 're making comments but at the moment it 's just
4 Pope John Paul 's outspoken words on behalf of a church which he deems to have been ‘ driven into the catacombs ’ reflect a worried assessment by the Secretariat of State , the Vatican 's Foreign Office , that Mr Gorbachev 's authority may come under increasing threat and that the Church should therefore exploit Soviet liberalisation for all it is worth .
5 Such demand could come from local business and professional groups .
6 If they die the whole campaign to save the condor by captive breeding could come under renewed attack .
7 But at least her baby would come from decent stock .
8 Foreign policy will come under close scrutiny .
9 The second example concerns the financing of the City Technology Colleges , and the government 's expectation that 80 per cent of this funding would come from private industry .
10 Such backing must come from national government — the issues are too big for the responsibility of generating finance to be handed down to more local levels .
11 The uncertain nature of political alignments in these years made it inevitable , then , that a National Government would come under serious consideration as a remedy for Britain 's ills .
12 The Aquarian alsatian or the Capricorn collie would come to little harm from canine astrology .
13 But he saw Baldwin on the Sunday morning and told him that he had no doubt that Curzon would be chosen , although his own turn would come in due course .
14 Eliseu Resende , the finance minister , has said that the money will come from increased taxation , a more aggressive privatisation plan , and a crackdown on tax evaders .
15 This risk might come from subsequent investigation of the audit , or from investigations carried out by any of the various regulatory bodies such as the Inland Revenue Investigations Branch or one established under the Financial Services Act .
16 ‘ Much future growth will come from continued substitution of older materials in the automotive , domestic appliance and packaging sectors , ’ says Mash .
17 Flooring material for one customer may come from different production and store areas and Mal has responsibility for the collation of all orders leaving the Coventry plant .
18 With a political prisoner escaped , all of us who were at the City of the Horizon must come under increased scrutiny . ’
19 Elaborating on this statement , he said that some of the increase would come from widening access , with more women , more older people and more people from ethnic minorities entering higher education , but he also anticipated a doubling of the participation rates among young people of the relevant age , from the present 15 per cent to 30 per cent .
20 A return to profitability and , with it , BP 's traditionally high reputation will come from successful teamwork .
21 In the national scheme of things , clippies would pay for themselves in increased efficiency , but more direct finance could come from super-taxing car fuel to penalise the gas guzzlers , and by re-allocating the tax benefits which currently go to company car drivers .
22 Probably the party would come in plain dinner dresses , just to show how far above such things they were .
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