How To Use Come apart In A Sentence

  • Moreover, in the Homeric there exists an acute and graphic sense of how things work, are put together, come apart.
  • I usually wear a size 12, and I was horrified that after wearing them for a couple of hours at work, they began to come apart at the gusset seam.
  • A thought I just had: how much do you hate it when motorbike/sidecar combinations come apart in films and the sidecar carries on on its own, usually ending up in a duck pond or hay stack.
  • “Let me watch you come apart in my hands, dearling.” A Hellion in Her Bed
  • My whole life had come apart at the seams.
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  • It's all very much more fragile, and could so easily come apart.
  • A brick cludgie would come apart at the seams in his presence.
  • And you're on a stepstool and so when you realize the one piece you slipped on backwards is the part that anchors the whole thing together, that means the whole thing has to come apart. Amazing Race's Jaime and Cara: We Wouldn't Have U-Turned Kent and Vyxsin
  • Few things are more disheartening than watching arrangements you've carefully nurtured come apart. Times, Sunday Times
  • But soon the caliphate began to come apart. Times, Sunday Times
  • Keep your eye on nailed joints to be sure they doesn't come apart under use!
  • The leisurewear industry would come apart at the seams, literally, without this indispensable fastening.
  • The wheel has come apart again.
  • In fact, the plastic or cloth covering can come apart, exposing the foam padding.
  • I've 'ad the neuralgy all the mornin', and my 'ead's been simply splittin', so thet I thought the bones 'ud come apart and all my brains go streamin' on the floor. Liza of Lambeth
  • If we don't attend to our moral traditions - to our culture - then our society could come apart at the seams.
  • Cracks and splits can be detrimental to good accuracy, and could possibly cause injury to the shooter should the rifle decide to come apart when fired.
  • Don't you hate it when motorbike/sidecar combinations come apart in films and the sidecar carries on on its own, usually ending up in a duck pond or hay stack?
  • The worthies claimed that the jeeps had literally come apart during campaigning as they carried 20 to 25 campaigners over the worst possible terrain.
  • Both men suffered facial injuries and one needed surgery to stitch together a piece of skin that had come apart from the left side of his nose.
  • Miriam asked me to pull over and I swung the truck off the asphalt, jounced over a rut, and stopped beside a car so rusted it looked as if it might come apart in the wind. Miracles, Inc.
  • Few things are more disheartening than watching arrangements you've carefully nurtured come apart. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is no seismic movement; the fabric of reality doesn't suddenly come apart at the seams.
  • A couple of big-time scooter makers had to recall their products when they started to come apart as kids rode them.
  • The upshot is that strong global and strong individual supervenience come apart “only when extrinsic properties are present in the supervenient set but disallowed from the subvenient base,” as Kim and others predicted (see Supervenience
  • We have two people working almost 24 hours a day rewrapping parcels that have come apart in the system.

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