Similar words: come about, by no means, come across, at home and abroad, come home, mean, meantime, the same as.
Random good picture Not show
91. The day we have been looking forward to has come at long last.
92. And for the bruised and cantankerous American psyche, it could not come at a worse time.
93. Today the summer has come at my window with its sighs and murmurs; and the bees are playing their minstrelsy at the court of the flowering grove.
94. Today the summer has come at my window with its sighs and murmurs; and the bees are plying their minstrelsy at the court of the flowering grove.
95. These riots have come at a testing time for Mr Sarkozy 's six - month - old presidency.
96. But the consensus is that dealing with Lashkar will come at the tail end of any process to demobilize militant groups in the country.
97. The rises come at time when many Londoners face a pay freeze and the retail price index is running at -1.4%, and on top of a 6% increase in fares this year.
98. I showed him the telegram, which read simply:'Gravely injured come at once Sebastian.'.
99. Call Mary, she can come at the drop of a hat.
100. Real mastery of transfiguration will come at a much later time in Mila and Oa's ascent.
101. But increased intelligence may have come at a cost, with genetic disease such as Tay-Sachs being side effects of genes that facilitate intelligence.Sentencedict
102. All this frivolousness could not come at a better time, smack in the middle of our it's-not-really-that-bad recession.
103. Nor did the growth in employment come at the expense of earnings since hourly earnings also rose rapidly during the past century along with employment and productivity.
104. Tom told me this morning to come at 7 p.m. and take pot luck.
105. And given that interconnection, power in the 21st century is no longer a zero-sum game; one country's success need not come at the expense of another.
106. Must a competitively priced new gadget come at the cost of young lives?
107. Any summit meeting should come at the end of careful preparation.
108. By far the most anticipated event of the day for markets will be U.S. non-farm payrolls data to come at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time.
109. They come at least in pairs(sentencedict.com), one serving as substratum for the other.
110. Easily his best performance in a black and white shirt may just have come at a very opportune time for both Lee Bowyer and Newcastle United.
111. The talks come at a critical moment for Nigeria's oil industry.
112. Branch hinting is necessary on the SPU because mispredicted branches come at a high cost.
113. Participants in no other industry get as self-righteously angry when public officials – particularly, central bankers – fail to come at once to their rescue when they get into (well-deserved) trouble.
114. We have to get a consensus that debt cancellation doesn't come at IDA's expense or at the expense of other countries.
115. And take heed that thou come at my first call. "
116. Your next period may come at the expected time, early or late.
117. Any personal touches, such as an individual logo created out of candle wax or a customised medieval procession, come at an extra, undisclosed cost.
118. He told me to come at 7 and take pot luck.
119. Rapprochement with the neighbours, however, need not come at the cost of worsening ties with America.
120. Vegetables and rice come at the end of the meal so you can take it easy on the toad and chicken feet that come out first.
More similar words: come about, by no means, come across, at home and abroad, come home, mean, meantime, the same as, by all means, meanwhile, by any means, by means of, measure up, eat, meaningful, neat, measurement, measure up to, feather, leather, cheat, wheat, great, eat up, death, treaty, threat, theater, create, beat down.