Example sentences of "come [prep] [noun] [adv] with " in BNC.

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1 They 've been going through all the lorries that 've come into Dover today with some sort of connection with the Balkans .
2 Students who drop out or who fail their college courses are often those who failed to come to terms quickly with their new environment and to make the necessary personal adjustments to fit into that environment .
3 Certainly the worst way to come to terms happily with being alone is to struggle constantly against it , always waiting for someone else to come along and take away our loneliness .
4 Members of this new authority will have to come to grips quickly with the dilemma that what a city needs , and what its people want , are often two different things .
5 Although this project failed to come to fruition even with Apple behind it — it was to lead us indirectly into more than a decade of adventuring in some of the most remote regions of Indonesia .
6 Liam came to life again with ‘ 'T IS the last rose of summer … ’
7 Georg Schwafenberger 's book The Legality of Nuclear Weapons ( 1958 , pp. 47–9 ) reached conclusions which came to terms more with the by then widespread possession of nuclear weapons .
8 This explains why British industry , which had never conceived of employing professional consultants to recruit and select executives and managers , came to terms psychologically with the idea of using headhunters .
9 It did n't matter , the other half did n't matter because it did n't come into contact really with the with the shaft .
10 ‘ I suppose I 'll come to terms eventually with the blank in my mind .
11 We 've all come to terms now with ‘ woofers ’ and ‘ tweeters ’ , but how much more ‘ woof ’ can you use ?
12 It is also important that the food comes into contact only with clean packaging . ’
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