Example sentences of "have come [adv prt] of [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 About 1,000 people , or 10 to 15 per cent of the workforce , have left since Mr Habgood 's arrival , while Bunzl has come out of a number of low-margin and loss-making businesses .
2 Little hard news has come out of the world 's biggest advertising group since it put the division on the block .
3 ‘ This has come out of the blue , and we are due to go to Argentina next summer , ’ said Wood .
4 Even more interesting chemistry has come out of the matrix isolation work on metal carbonyls .
5 The other lesson that has come out of the work within the RAF and from the work done outside is that expert systems in particular , but AI in general will not come about as stand-alone , independent systems , but will be embedded or connected to existing or planned conventional computing .
6 CPMA Managing Director , Nigel Rushman , claims that several other sponsors have already signed for the Sevens spectacular in April at Murrayfield , but for a variety of reasons none has come out of the woods yet .
7 If any good has come out of the Mandy 's story , it is the barrage of publicity it has provided on under-age sex .
8 SOMETHING good has come out of the NatWest Access computer system foul-up which left customers with muddled statements .
9 The appointment of Sally Coleman to the job of manager of Waterstones at Harrods from her current post running the Covent Garden outpost of the empire has come out of the blue .
10 Moreover , there is nothing in the 152-page report to satisfy the Opposition , industry or the few remaining Tory rebels that the Government has come out of the review with a national energy policy .
11 I mean eventually eventually , sooner or later and it might be later if somebody else will still it has to come out of the profit margin .
12 If that money has to come out of the existing budget , then we should , or the Chief Constable , or the Police Committee ought to look at the priorities again .
13 The Ministry of Defence objected on three grounds : the increase in nuclear missiles available to the West was operationally unnecessary and would only add to the existing nuclear overkill ; mixed manning was a formula for military disaster ; and the cost of the British share would have to come out of the already overstretched Defence budget .
14 So I mean it it was it was represented to me er and I felt that there was some logic in it that that this company would not be discussing this deal unless it felt it could make money out of it and that money in the end would have to come out of the local people here .
15 Westward had recently been the scene of a public boardroom row that could have come out of a TV series .
16 They must have come out of a back entrance to the flats and they were intent on avoiding somebody , although I 'd seen nothing suspicious when I 'd cruised down Seymour Place .
17 ‘ They 're going to have to come out of the forests … ’ he replied , with a grin like a Cheshire cat .
18 ‘ He seems to have come out of the race very well , but we 'll know how well by next week , ’ said Francois Boutin .
19 One of the most important results to have come out of the work is the demonstration that similar molecular those in other larger and more conventionally studied organisms .
20 I had a kind of ear infection which caused giddiness and I had to come out of the West End play I was appearing in at the time , The Rose Tattoo .
21 Because the coffin had to come out of the stayed in the house the b the
22 " Welcome as always , Peter , " said Sir Edmund affably , " but you look as if you 've come out of the sea .
23 Would er my honourable friend agree with me that one of the reasons why we 've come out of the recession so well is the fact that we do n't have a social contract and .
24 The Feldwebel had not moved and I looked all the way up his black leather jack-boots and the thin grey greatcoat with its cheap tin buttons looking as if they had come out of a Christmas pudding before I noticed that his eyes were slightly open and that he was watching me with an uncle 's amusement .
25 He had come out of a nightmare with something of the steel town 's steel inside him .
26 The staff were also worried about his speech , not seeming to take into account the fact that this was the first time he had come out of a Punjabi-speaking environment and was having to cope with new experiences in a foreign language .
27 ‘ Lovat was enquiring about you earlier on , Piper , ’ shouted one of the medics who had come out of the barn to tend to the wounded .
28 We had just come out of a 12.30 matinee and the street was burning in the sun and those who had come out of the theatre was cool and real but the others in the street were moving in a white light that had them like shadows .
29 had come out of the house .
30 Lee and his stepdad had come out of the shed .
  Next page