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How To Use Come round In A Sentence

  • The mother of two did not come round from the general anaesthetic. Times, Sunday Times
  • Come round and see us sometime.
  • The wind has come round to the north.
  • Meanwhile, back in the ring, Ferguson has come round and slowly stumbles to his feet.
  • Why don't you come round for lunch?
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  • That the world has come round is due to the melodic pop that now lurks amid their rock riffs. Times, Sunday Times
  • October has come round again and the weather is still mild, with the cold snap we had last weekend coming as a shock.
  • It's the first thing you see as you come round the corner. You can't miss it.
  • The electrician will come round to collect the electricity fee for the month one of these days.
  • `Prepare to come round to windward ," he said, watching the seas. LET NOT THE DEEP
  • Smith's campaign manager, Robin Cook, appears confident that his candidate will come round to endorsing electoral reform.
  • This road is a death trap and drivers come round the bend far too fast.
  • The window is half open, and the sounds of the street come up, 'baaing' and bellowing and squeaking, the roll of wheels, the tramp of feet, and, more distant, the shouting of an auctioneer in the market-place, whose stentorian tones come round the corner as he puts up rickcloths for sale. Hodge and His Masters
  • Well, he was what they call a revivalist, and he was holding forth one blazin 'hot day out in the sun when all to once he goes down, _flat, _ an' don't come round for the better part o 'two days. A Deal in Wheat and Other Stories of the New and Old West
  • So I beep him and we have a little chat about things and I tell him I'm very unhappy and he should come round… maybe he will, maybe not… we know what that means.
  • Another hot day is on the way, mind you, it's doing wonders for my fruit garden, anyone want to come round and see my mango's?
  • I think he'll come round eventually.
  • That the world has come round is due to the melodic pop that now lurks amid their rock riffs. Times, Sunday Times
  • We'd be stuck if your sister hadn't offered to come round and look after the children tonight.
  • Finally, the tumblers of the resistant lock had come round in the magical right combination.
  • He threatened to come round and kick my head in.
  • As I picked it up, I regretted it: he was in a local pub, drunk as usual, wanted to come round.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • You spend your benefit money on drugs and then you come round here scrounging for free food.
  • But they must not imagine that all people are constituted after their model and likely to come round to their views or remain "unreclaimed" adversaries on whom no sympathy is to be wasted. Out of the Libertarian Labyrinth
  • We had to come round by the wheat fields.
  • I heard the coach that hit Marisa come round the bend at the far end of the road, it was making a strange noise, it sounded like the engine was misfiring.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • The mother of two did not come round from the general anaesthetic. Times, Sunday Times
  • But property 'ull rise in value like a puddock stool at dark, serr, if the pits come round it! The House with the Green Shutters
  • Come round tonight and we'll watch a video.
  • I just had some woman come round to read my meter.
  • Pour some water on his face he'll soon come round.
  • He may come round, or worse still, spill some of the facts in his sleep or something like that.
  • Come round tonight and we'll watch a video.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • We race just feet above the flat wet sand before he pulls on the controls and we climb steeply and bank seawards to come round for our landing.
  • If you can continue to see your grandson, your son may come round and in time accept him too. The Sun
  • Our expeditions are but tours, and come round again at evening to the old hearthside from which we set out. July « 2008 « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • Come round for lunch and then we can discuss it at leisure.
  • Come round to my place this evening.
  • Banks was a veritable Philip Larkin when it came to hospitals, could think only of "the anesthetic from which none come round. AFTERMATH
  • He used to come round here and we would babysit for him.
  • It means cops could plant evidence on your computer 's hard drive, then come round and nick you. The Sun
  • Leave him alone and he'll soon come round.
  • The electrician will come round to collect the electricity fee for the month one of these days.
  • This summer, Europe's top clubs have strengthened their sides in a way that should pay dividends when the crucial knockout matches come round in late-February and March.
  • We'd be stuck if your sister hadn't offered to come round and look after the children tonight.
  • We had a lot of debts and the bailiffs would come round frequently. Times, Sunday Times
  • Come round at eight and I'll have dinner waiting .
  • It took me a good few minutes and a drink of water to come round.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • Then when the final half-dozen qualifiers come round these youngsters will be much more experienced. Times, Sunday Times
  • As you come round apply the pressure to the front of the down hill ski as you angulate once more.
  • You must come round for a meal sometime.
  • Near the base of the teeth, the denticles are less strongly pointed, and may become rounded.
  • Okay, so I survive on instant with a splosh of semi-skimmed and a chemical sweetener, but I'm sure I would appreciate the finer qualities of real coffee if only someone would come round to my house every hour on the hour and make me a cup.
  • Then when the final half-dozen qualifiers come round these youngsters will be much more experienced. Times, Sunday Times
  • Do you want to come round for lunch?
  • The bailiffs would come round at the drop of a hat. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have slowly come round to the view that Australians are right to distrust intellectuals (by which I mean cultural poseurs, not the simply clever).
  • Then we would make back to our seats, and re-take them sighingly; while the slaves, leaving aside their portion, the skulls of the sheep, would come round our rank with a wooden bowl of water, and a coffee-cup as dipper, to splash over our fingers, while we rubbed them with the tribal soap-cake. Seven Pillars of Wisdom
  • You must come round for a meal sometime.
  • Should however the revolution turn into the directorate, the consulate and then the empire, you may come round and lynch us.
  • He hasn't come round yet . Could you try and straighten him out?
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • And when play finally got under way, there was an almighty surprise in store come round two. Times, Sunday Times
  • You must come round sometime soon.
  • It's taken me a while to come round to what originally looked a fairly ridiculous notion. Times, Sunday Times
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • In fact, I think of you as a sunny person, very cheerful and fun to be with, just the person one wants to see come round the corner -
  • We have a lot of young players in the squad who will be better by the time the European Championships come round.
  • Come round to my place this evening.
  • The electrician will come round to collect the electricity fee for the month one of these days.
  • Her eyes shone with life, and when she smiled, her face widened to become round, lovely, and dimpled.
  • I explained that, personally, they were strangers to me; but I offered, if the police would call all the cats in the district together, to come round and see if I could recognise them by their yaul. Three Men on the Bummel
  • She rang Simos and Clio: they wanted to come round, but she postponed seeing them, she must be out searching. COUP D'ETAT
  • In fact, come round my place of a weekend and chances are you'll catch me with a feather duster in my hand. The Sun
  • She'll never come round to our way of thinking.
  • So the bizzies come round here and bust me for possession.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • It's taken me a while to come round to what originally looked a fairly ridiculous notion. Times, Sunday Times
  • The wind has come round to the north.
  • Come round tonight and we'll watch a video.
  • That the world has come round is due to the melodic pop that now lurks amid their rock riffs. Times, Sunday Times
  • Come round to my place this evening.
  • After the first operation he wouldn't come round and kept thrashing around which is when they found the second blood clot.
  • As anyone whose had a general anaesthetic will know, you have to cough and expectorate hard pretty much as soon as you come round to clear the anaesthetic out of your lungs.
  • Don't worry - she'll come round eventually.
  • The wind has come round to the north.
  • All things will come round to him who will but wait. 
  • Don't push him; he'll come round in time.
  • We're not on the telephone, so you'll have to come round to the house.
  • Come round for lunch and then we can discuss it at leisure.
  • Come round at eight and I'll have dinner waiting .

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