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43 Sentences With "comes away with"

How to use comes away with in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "comes away with" and check conjugation/comparative form for "comes away with". Mastering all the usages of "comes away with" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Andreessen Horowitz, the venture capital firm, comes away with about $900 million in instant profit.
The player Bonomo defeated heads-up, Fedor Holz, comes away with a $6 million consolation prize.
The result: the president comes away with a warped view of life in Maryland's seventh congressional district.
So it may take some time to determine exactly how big a delegate lead the winner comes away with.
Investors in the E round included Google and Western Digital, but it was Microsoft who comes away with the prize.
So if Sanders comes away with a surprise victory in Iowa, it won't just be because men there prefer Sanders.
Even a "failed" social engineering attempt can be a success, if the person calling comes away with new information about the account.
In reading Lelyveld's moving, elegiac portrait of Roosevelt's last months, one comes away with conflicting emotions about the man and his final mission.
What the reader comes away with is a deep reverence for seafood as well as the humans who fish, harvest, and process it responsibly.
Unlike in sports, when a competition dancer wins, she comes away with the intoxicating knowledge that she is not just good, but also liked.
An article in this week's New York Magazine looks at Snowden's life in exile and comes away with a unique insight into Snowden's clemency plan.
Gloria Burgle travels from Eden Valley to Los Angeles to investigate her dead stepfather's past and comes away with no pertinent information on the case.
In the first Kingsman, limbs are severed, spy tropes are methodically subverted, and Eggsy comes away with a sharp suit and a lesson about transcending social class.
A "fortune" implies that the client comes away with a tepid platitude about their life instead of a useful, inventive take on what they ought to do.
By the end, Witt acknowledges that after five years of research and writing, "my life saw few structural changes," though she comes away with some abstract insights.
What he comes away with: Leaving office isn't so bad if you get to sport rocking aviators like Vice President Joe Biden and go back to wearing mom jeans.
Editorial Pretty much everyone who spends any time examining the American system of secured cash bail comes away with the same conclusion: It's unjust, expensive and ineffective, even counterproductive.
A good narrative essay not only tells a story but supplies a reason for telling it, so that the reader comes away with a sense of some larger meaning.
One comes away with an impression that Chomskyan syntacticians are a puerile bunch simply insisting that there is a literal, regional "language organ" in the brain despite having zero evidence for it.
Even after everything she finds out about the resiliency of fat, she comes away with the firm conviction that obesity is all about willpower — and that weight loss is the ultimate goal.
In that, this HBO drama from director Steven Soderbergh essentially takes a pretty conventional murder mystery, dresses it up with a gimmick and comes away with a pretty compelling if somewhat conventional story.
Arizona is a winner-take-all state, so Trump comes away with all 58 of its delegates — which helps him continue his progress toward the 1,237 delegates he needs to win an outright majority.
Screwing up her courage after the lecture, Greer follows Faith into the bathroom, and after a chat about misogyny and injustice comes away with something of more concrete use: Faith Frank's elegant, embossed business card.
The letters and notebooks that survive don't reveal much; the reader comes away with a picture not of striking simplicity or complexity but of a rather conventional person who wrote a staggering number of books.
Sometimes it's the wording of a clue, other times it's a much bigger change like the shape of the map itself, but he always comes away with a long to-do list after watching a playtest.
If Mr. Kasich comes away with 20 percent of the vote in Utah, it may be a sign that going forward he could be a spoiler who splits the anti-Trump vote — just what many conservatives fear.
With thoughtful portraiture paired to each subject's idea of the American dream, in their own words and handwriting, the viewer comes away with the realization that the "dream" means different things to different people based on their own experience and privilege.
Revisiting this piece now, one comes away with the impression that we could have accurately anticipated the limited effects of microfinance in the developing world if we'd taken seriously what was implied by the limited effects in our own backyard.
Vice President Mike Pence said on Monday that he will fly to Turkey to try to negotiate a ceasefire, but given the conditions on the ground — and the US's lack of leverage — the odds are slim that he comes away with a win.
Netflix has clearly sunk another small fortune into producing "Altered Carbon," and comes away with an expensive dud -- one of those enticing-from-a-distance dramas that merely demonstrates you really can't judge a book (or a TV show based on one) by its glossy cover.
"I'm hoping this exhibition will raise awareness to a broad audience about the rich visual art history of tattoo art, and that the public comes away with a sense of how much tattoo culture is connected to sailor culture, and how they have grown together, and apart, in the American imagination," Caruso added in our conversation.
" Don't look too hard for any thematic link between the world of George R.R. Martin and Paddy's Pub… although there are echoes of Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish's matter-of-fact philosophizing when the gas-addled gang watches cartoons to figure out how to solve their vermin problem, and comes away with the realization, "The mouse always wins… The cat keeps getting hurt.
Three weeks and four cities into a notably strong men's wear cycle that will creep to a conclusion next month in the truncated remains of New York Fashion Week: Men, an observer comes away with an assortment of press kits, stacks of engraved invitations and series of moments — sometimes comical, occasionally bizarre, often absurd and many rising to the level of magic — that amount to a semi-disorganized whole definitively greater than the sum of its parts.
Steph and Libby are knocked off Steph's bike by Brendan Bell (Blair Venn). Steph comes away with torn ligaments, but Libby is left in a critical condition, which causes Steph to become depressed. Libby and Drew break up, but Steph is upset when Drew admits he still loves Libby. Steph then briefly dates Daniel Fitzgerald (Brett Tucker).
Budgie reckons he can sell it, however Mr Endell insists that he burns it all. The wind catches the paper and the pornography blows off the bonfire just as a busload of cricket players arrive. Budgie comes away with a fruit machine from the cricket club which he takes to Hazel's flat. They drive off but his assistant Grogan says he is going off with Charity (the stripper).
474–475" Scholar Amy Knight said that "While The Sword and the Shield contains new information ... none of it has much significance for broader interpretations of the Cold War. The main message the reader comes away with after plowing through almost a thousand pages is the same one gleaned from the earlier books: the Soviets were incredibly successful, albeit evil, spymasters, and none of the Western services could come close to matching their expertise. Bravo the KGB.Amy Knight, "The selling of the KGB," The Wilson Quarterly.
On learning that Marcus was once a great gladiator, Pilate employs him secretly to lead a band of cutthroats to raid the chief of the Ammonites, who has been causing him problems. Marcus comes away with many fine horses and much treasure, but when he goes to see his son, he finds that Flavius has been thrown from a horse and is near death. With no doctors around, Marcus desperately takes the boy to a noted healer and begs for his help. The healer is Jesus, who saves Flavius's life.
" Meacham continued, "You cannot write about Jackson without standing on Remini's shoulders." Daniel Walker Howe, a historian who took a rather critical view of Jackson, speaks favorably of Remini, writing: "A forthright admirer of his subject, Remini is laudatory in his assessments of Jackson's achievements. At the same time, he is also a meticulous scholar who does not allow his prejudices to get in the way of the evidence he finds." Of Remini's trilogy, Joel H. Silbey says that "one comes away with the feeling that here is how Jackson saw himself, might have set forth his won case, and wished to be remembered.
Sameer Behl (Shahid Kapoor) comes to Mumbai with Bollywood dreams, struggles through the day as a courier boy, and keeps failing in auditions for advertisements. More stereotypes are stuffed in as he refuses to take help from his dad in Delhi, is thrown out from his rented flat by the landlord, and comes away with his calculative companion. One day, a movie director named Rajeev Sharma (Mohnish Behl) and Assistant director (Prince Rodde) sees Sameer dancing and calls him to his office. Soon, Sameer is signed as the male lead in his film, and his friend Tina (Genelia D'Souza) is selected as the choreographer on the same project.
Billy Ray tries to intervene, but only comes away with one of the outlaw's heirloom spurs as Diablo rides away. The sheriff leads a party in pursuit, only to return with a group of riderless horses and with his tongue cut out. Billy Ray vows to rescue Nettie with the help of Kid Durango (reputed to be "the fastest gun in the West") despite not knowing how to ride a horse or shoot a gun. His ineptitude is displayed when on his way out of town, his mount rears up and throws him from the saddle, the impact causing his revolver to discharge and kill his horse.
He was the second husband of Lady Frances Howard, daughter of Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham and Katherine Carey, Countess of Nottingham. He may have been the subject of a number of Elizabethan satires such as Thomas Nashe's Lenten Stuffe, Ben Jonson's Every Man in his Humour, and may have been the model of Shakespeare's Falstaff, who was originally given the name "Oldcastle". Sir John Oldcastle was an ancestor of Lord Cobham. Though Falstaff is more likely modelled on his father William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham (also descended from John Oldcastle) who was married to Frances Newton, whose family name was originally Caradock; referenced in 2 Henry IV when Falstaff sings "The Boy and the Mantle," a ballad in which Sir Caradoc's wife comes away with her fidelity and reputation intact (McKeen 1981).
While he wrote works in several different genres, including symphonies, orchestral overtures, operas, piano works, and chamber music, it is his choral works which received the most attention. However, today he is primarily remembered for his String Sextet in D Major, Op. 68. This string sextet was known as the “Prize Sextet” because Krug won the Stelzner Prize for chamber music with this composition. The Prize Sextet was originally for 2 Violins, Viola, Violotta, Cello and Cellone, but the publisher of the work (Fritz Kistner) wisely hedged his bets and produced an edition for the standard combination of 2 Violins, 2 Violas and 2 Cellos in addition to the so-called Stelzner version. Of this work, Wilhelm Altmann, the famous chamber music critic, has written: > “If not a masterpiece of the highest order from start to finish, Krug’s > Sextet nonetheless comes away with high honors.
Dave Malucci first appears as a second-year resident. He often breaks protocol to get things done and appears to lack warmth towards patients, but is occasionally shown to be both sensitive and insightful, particularly where younger patients are involved (a story in the episode "Loose Ends" very strongly implies that Malucci was physically and/or sexually abused when he was a child). In "Last Rites," Malucci and John Carter steal medical gear from an ambulance to help some construction workers injured at a site; later, Kerry Weaver reprimands them for violating emergency protocols and Carter comes away with a negative view of Malucci that he never really changes his mind about. Malucci attended medical school in Grenada, and in "Great Expectations," he uses his knowledge of the Caribbean to accurately diagnose a patient with a rare disease called Jamaican Vomiting Sickness because he recognized the symptoms from eating the area's akee fruit.

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