Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] to come " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He was smiling but with such grimness that she began to regret her rash decision to come .
2 The lady Anne has talked of little else since she met you and would be overjoyed , I know , were you able in due course to come and live with us .
3 You should certainly benefit from some kind of major career or professional change to come around the 4th and the 11th .
4 All that money to come back again .
5 If any wonder whether they made the right decision to come home and marry a British man , Dolly Howard who danced round the world had the wittiest appreciation of the difference between the continental men and the boys back home :
6 With two wins already gained and two more strong performers to come , the middle position is ideally suited for the weakest member .
7 The second point is that of course as we accept into the role of opposition indeed to give these alternative proposals , give this particulary case to come within the government guidelines .
8 He wanted his personal belief and his professional expertness to come out as a single attribute .
9 Mr Takeshita wants that election to come after the Paris economic summit in mid-July , hoping that the voters will be impressed with his statesmanlike performance in dealing with the Latin debt crisis .
10 Of the more than fifty books to come from the press , there is no doubt that the finest was his Chaucer of 1896 , reckoned by many to be the greatest book printed in England since Caxton , of which he printed 425 copies with an additional thirteen on vellum .
11 Every girl in New York who is not a singer is only waiting for the right break to come along so she can get to be one .
12 A green Renault 18 , very travel-stained with grime on the windscreen except for the segments swept by the wipers , was the seventh private car to come out .
13 The jobless figures were the first economic indicators to come out during the campaign , there are many more before election day .
14 It required the next generation of researchers and a simpler mollusc to come closer to finding god 's favourite .
15 In order to make things run smoothly , the BMC asked some notable British climbers to come along and help out .
16 Take this opportunity to come with Travelsphere to China — one of the last great travel experiences .
17 ‘ The Face never wanted this case to come to court and every effort was made to settle the dispute , without success . ’
18 ‘ The Face never wanted this case to come to court and every effort was made to settle the dispute , without success . ’
19 As an experienced head of the educational system in Vitebsk pointed out in 1832 , it was " extremely difficult to persuade capable and reliable Russians to come here , even to take important posts " .
20 Expert systems are the first commercial products to come from the world of Artificial Intelligence research .
21 ‘ The clearest , most unequivocal finding to come out of our social analysis is the singularity of the subjects in it . ’
22 In this sense , it makes a significant contribution toward a third-generation effort ( perhaps still short of definitive ) that will treat the recombinant-DNA controversy as a not-to-be overlooked early warning of profound social change to come — as the achievements of this scientifically enormously productive century are built into new foundations for human society .
23 ‘ I 've paid all this money to come to Hawaii and all you can do is screw around . ’
24 While waiting for this money to come through , he asked the owners if they would allow him to order goods for the coming summer season .
25 However fast the army was marching , the Forteviot men would take an hour to reach them , and another hour to come back .
26 SUZANNE OTTERSON , the 15-year-old Scottish junior champion who was making her senior debut , gave a flowing performance to finish fourth in the short programme and move up to fifth place overall with the free skating to come .
27 Sucralose is one of the few products to come out of the Reading research labs that T&L felt it had the resources to develop through to the market .
28 British leisure group Brent Walker , in debt to its banks to the tune of £1.2 billion ( $2.1 billion ) , announced a year-end loss of £256m , with further losses to come this year .
29 In a taped statement broadcast on two radio stations yesterday he said : ‘ I , David Koresh , agree upon the broadcasting of this tape to come out peacefully with all the people immediately . ’
30 Is he further aware that he carries the good wishes of the party behind him in the difficult few months to come and should go to the talks in great confidence , knowing of the great contribution that this country has made to Europe since the days of William Pitt ?
  Next page