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

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1 The proposal has a parallel in a new clause tabled in Committee by the Hon. Member for Dumfries ( Sir H. Monro ) proposing that bus interests should come under the Scottish Transport Users Consultative Committee , as rail and ferry interests do at present .
2 Finance for development should come from the central Government .
3 In view of the evidence given yesterday should there not be a full and frank ministerial statement — which should come from the Prime Minister — of what was known inside the Government at the time about the supergun affair ?
4 The details of how such intentions could be realized would be left to local joint planning and financing at the district level : ‘ any proposal to move the balance of care from hospital to community should come from the local level ’ .
5 They should come by the back door .
6 Surely the needs of the members should come before the administrative easiness of putting people into sections for the Union and as I 've said who better to judge where they need to go and what their needs are than the members themselves .
7 If this is not a practical reality , then any effort to counter discrimination against older consumes must come from the other side of the fence ; from manufactures of user-friendly products , from retailers in the way they present goods for sale , and from those who are responsible for creating the environment in which shops trade .
8 Above all , this must come from the head teacher and from the senior staff of the school ; from any special needs specialists or teams already in the school ; from members of the new advisory and support services , as well as from educational psychologists , social workers and any health professionals who may be involved .
9 This must come by the delicate interaction of her own willed effort and the creative understanding which Hilton calls grace .
10 Some support for this might come from the archaeological evidence , which attests Kenchester 's increasing importance through time .
11 What is different in the Banbury situation erm is that fact that you are not only talking about one school and it 's education because Banbury School draws not only it 's own eleven to sixteen year old children , who have the option to go forward to the sixth form , but of course all the children that come from the Warriner School at Bloxham , all the children that come from Drayton School , and a certain number of the children who might come from the Roman Catholic Secondary School in Banbury , so there are a whole lot more people involved than just the actual children , and that 's what made Banbury a hybrid .
12 The Court of Appeal detected " underlying transactions of a solicitorial nature " and determined that on the expert evidence ( inter alia from a former President of the Law Society ) which had been presented the undertakings given were such as might come within the usual course of a solicitor 's business .
13 so I went over and ask them where the New Town was , and they told us where , walk up the road till you come to the lights , turn right , follow the lane and you 'll come to the New Town erm
14 On the other , just wait a moment and we 'll come to the other side of the argument because the argument is carefully and evenly balanced .
15 He 'll come down the other side of the trees .
16 ‘ He 'll come on the very tick , ’ Breeze prophesied , as the clock struck three — and sure enough , there was the bath chair at the gate !
17 I trust , I trust that if there 's going to be any question of names coming forward to be a approved locally , not selected , I hope not selected , that they will be er they 'll come from the local level at which the police authority actually functions and not from other counties without that particular area and so My Lords , I would suggest er that er the best step to go for is er Lord MacIntosh 's Amendment Number Five and his er supplements and I would suggest My Lords that Amendment Number Twenty is resisted by your Lordships because it talks about one half of the members shall be members of a relevant council and I suggest above all My Lords that Amendment Number Twenty Seven is cast into outer darkness .
18 Don the staff comment one could come under the national curriculum levels if you
19 The final crunch could come with the full moon on Thursday — but you will be well able to handle any problems that may arise .
20 These purposeful wanderings in nearby London commons were the nearest he could come to the idealized world he had found in The Amateur Poacher .
21 Melton Park would have a very easy passage in the Members ' , but may instead go for the Restricted , where his main opposition could come from The Grey Boreen .
22 A new opportunity for such changes could come in the current review of the board by its chairman , Andrew Large .
23 I knew I 'd come to the right place .
24 ‘ I knew I 'd come to the right place . ’
25 They 'd come to the Chiltern Show at Stoke Mandeville on the understanding that more than 90-thousand people were expected to turn up .
26 They 'd come from the other way from er Snade Lane not Broad Lane , they 'd come up from they 'd come farther round , round and come in th in round the back sort of thing and we we 'd got no headquarters any more .
27 The visitors were joined by the monstrous dog who 'd come from the main house : her name , Apanage had told them , was Fawn .
28 A few moments later , balloon of armagnac in hand , I was listening to Dennis recount with great self-satisfaction how he 'd come by the priceless spirit , when our attention was drawn by the sound of running water from the kitchen .
29 His speech of 1 November 1962 made references to ’ some differences ' between the two governments , but it was asserted that ‘ Nothing shall come between the Soviet Union and Cuba ’ , and the emphasis was on the Soviet arms which had not been withdrawn rather than on the missiles which had ( Cuba Socialista , no. 16 , Dec. 1962 , pp. 28–30 , in Clissold : 1970 , p. 276 ) .
30 On this day we would come to the other end of the running spectrum , to the fastest men and women on earth whose triumphs would depend upon mere hundredths of a second in the 100 metres .
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