How To Use Come to light In A Sentence

  • The conduct that has come to light is an affront to the most basic standards of morality and decency.
  • Nor has a single example come to light from among the 4,000 known hymenopteran sawflies and horntails, even though their larvae often form dense cooperative aggregations. SuperCooperators
  • The original Italian version has recently come to light, discovered in an autograph manuscript held in the Vatican Library.
  • Fresh evidence has recently come to light which suggests that he didn't in fact commit the murder.
  • The government should be beyond and above any misdoing or scam, but time and time again these incidents come to light, make you wonder whatever next?. and also makes you wonder about the other things that have not come to light. Archive 2008-01-01
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  • Many of the details of the events leading up to the bombing have come to light in recent months.
  • Looking at it so, it was plain that you were _suppressing_ the cameo -- burking it; since, once taken as you had taken it, it could never come to light again. Martin Hewitt, Investigator
  • He based this scholarly conjecture on the fact that a gazelle horn, identified as belonging to a now extinct Tripolitan species, was actually discovered on the island, while an adolescent female skull of the hypo-dolichocephalous (Nepenthean) type had come to light in some excavations at Benghazi. South Wind
  • As I await the return of my mastodontic Bava book from the printer, certain interesting tid-bits of information not privvy to me, or unnoticed by me as I was preparing its 1100+ pages, are beginning to come to light. Archive 2007-05-13
  • One idea that has come to light is to consolidate the number of local coverage bodies from one per state to about 20 across the nation.
  • Worked in silk on silk, it depicts Moses in the bullrushes, a subject that Vanderpoel's research suggested had been worked at the school, but no example of which bad come to light.
  • A letter hidden for years by British silent movie pioneer Charlie Chaplin has come to light which claims he lied about his birthplace and was in fact born in a gypsy caravan.
  • This evidence did not come to light until after the trial.
  • Nevertheless, hard proof that he ordered the hijackings may never come to light.
  • More recently, pregnancy risks associated with other SSRIs have also come to light.
  • Despite its denials and stonewalling, damning evidence has come to light implicating it in the deaths.
  • But another mechanism has come to light: reconsolidation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Errors, fortunately, seldom occur but nonetheless are deeply regretted when they come to light.
  • Fresh evidence has recently come to light which suggests that he didn't in fact commit the murder.
  • But the sheer scale of the failings that have come to light recently mean that suspicion and wariness will not vanish so easily this time around.
  • New analysis has now come to light on what may have been a premature resignation in game 6.
  • If initiation practices do come to light, a school governing body has to take action to prevent this from happening again.
  • This letter has only just come to light. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now that a lunette's sinopia with faint sheep has come to light, the argument becomes stronger for the relief filling the chapel's remaining iconographical lacuna.
  • That shows that even the older embryo is still riddled with "embryonic areas" which do not normally come to light but can be detected at any time by indicators rich in potencies. Hans Spemann - Nobel Lecture
  • That becomes more and more obvious as the vile acts of the current administration come to light, and instead of honestly saying, "Yes, that is simply wrong," they slither and dissimulate. Balkinization
  • She also wants to be able to leave a small sum to cover additional costs if other names come to light.
  • The way in which the various issues that come to light here connect to the question of world, transcendence, and the conceallng-unconcealing of truth is somewhat tangled, and, in the period of the late 1920s, and even into the early 1930s, is not yet clearly worked out in Heldegger’s thinking. Enowning
  • New evidence has recently come to light.
  • The Vendor objects to being required to notify the Purchaser of breaches which may come to light between exchange and completion.
  • Fresh evidence has recently come to light which suggests that he didn't in fact commit the murder.
  • The conduct that has come to light is an insult to the people, and an affront to the most basic standards of morality and decency.
  • Remains from Roman Canterbury have also come to light, including walls standing two feet high, metalled roads, a number of tessellated floors, and a hoard of about 700 low-denomination coins spanning the 1st - 4th centuries.
  • Here, the unrecorded deeds of long-dead city dwellers come to light; the brewers, tanners, cabinet makers, printers and bakers are all to be found in the records of the city's ancient parishes.
  • But at the same time, it is NOT “pointless” to be enthusiastically, tear-jerkingly, unwaveringly “proud” of the “land of your birth” — to the point where people are actually STILL SURPRISED — or even scandalized — when yet another of “our” scandals come to light. US in Police State Top 10
  • ‘If it was the bank undercharging for eight years, I'm quite certain it would have come to light an awful lot quicker,’ she said.
  • The swop did not come to light until Arlena, who suffered from a congenital heart defect, had to undergo surgery.
  • According to what they are, does the trueness or falseness which the idea harbored come to light. Meaning of Truth
  • Nor has a single example come to light from among the 4,000 known hymenopteran sawflies and horntails, even though their larvae often form dense cooperative aggregations. SuperCooperators
  • After the lapse of a fortnight, Hepburn, candidate for congressman-at-large, declined to accept because "it is quite apparent that a very large portion of the Republicans, owing to the unfortunate circumstances which have come to light since the adjournment of the convention, are not disposed to accept its conclusion as an authoritative utterance of the party." [ A Political History of the State of New York, Volumes 1-3
  • Both incidents ‘are the first to come to light in several years involving DPRK officials stationed abroad at embassies caught smuggling narcotics,’ the report said.
  • It's only quite recently that the long-lasting and devastating effects of such chemicals on wildlife have come to light.
  • His retrospective exhibition featured only 123 of his best works, but many more have come to light since, and continue to do so.
  • “But at the same time, it is NOT ‘pointless’ to be enthusiastically, tear-jerkingly, unwaveringly ‘proud’ of the ‘land of your birth’ — to the point where people are actually STILL SURPRISED — or even scandalized — when yet another of ‘our’ scandals come to light.” US in Police State Top 10
  • Evidence had been presented and transcripts published long ago; the details of the crime had long since come to light.
  • My traumatic condition has only come to light in very recent times, since I heard about those prisoners claiming compo.
  • They are still hopeful fresh evidence will come to light and Mr Hall made a desperate appeal for new information.
  • His previously unrecognised role in the war effort has come to light in a book - Horsforth at War - published to mark the 60th anniversary of VE Day.
  • Now that their actions have come to light they may once again threaten the stability of the financial system. Robert Creamer: Wall Street Hopes to Use Republicans to Re-Purchase Congress
  • The issue has come to light due to the testimony of a slaughterhouse worker who says the infected cow recently diagnosed with Mad Cow disease showed no symptoms of being a downer when it was butchered.
  • The swop did not come to light until Arlena, who suffered from a congenital heart defect, had to undergo surgery.

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