Example sentences of "[det] [noun] from " in BNC.

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1 If we plan a burglary between us at least it makes us think about the , the sort of things that we need to look at our houses , to stop that burglary from
2 The authority wants to revamp the site to meet new social services guidelines limiting the number of people in each bungalow from eight to six .
3 The report drew little enthusiasm from environmental groups .
4 ‘ I want you to take that money from Bella 's house . ’
5 He said : ‘ When you take 15 pence off the price of sugar as a loss leader , you have got to recoup that money from somewhere .
6 If the donor is an individual ( or a company ) and pays basic rate income tax the RNLI can claim back the tax already paid on that money from the Inland Revenue turning the donor 's £600 , for example , into £800 for the Institution .
7 And er she says , Where did you get that money from ?
8 This followed claims by Lorraine Osman , former chairman of the London subsidiary of Bank Bumiputra , that money from a collapsed Hong Kong company , Carrian , might have financed the opposition campaign in the general election in October .
9 It 's their intention to leave the boat station there , but as a boat hiring station only , and to let rent that to somebody , not to have boat building enterprises , not to have a car park , not to have a chandlery and so on which was put there by the person whose who used to own it , and we will recoup all of that money from renting that boat station so it can be run as a boat hiring station again , and from three or four of the moorings that are will have been there for a long time , with proper permission .
10 The Durham Cathedral players will only function as protectors of the cathedral and of refugees seeking asylum in so far as others in the drama expect that function from them .
11 And the Yucatan Canal is the waterway that separates that bit from
12 Was it so necessary to his male pride to wring that admission from her ?
13 Now it seemed to us that freedom from disease was more likely related to the weak growth of the trees in the forest .
14 It was a phrase with many shades of meaning , but essentially in these years it came to refer to that freedom from lay intervention in ecclesiastical appointments and operations which it was Hugh 's special mission to promote .
15 In the next scene Macbeth , speaking alone and with no need to deceive anyone ( given the convention in Elizabethan drama that what characters say in soliloquy is true ) , admits the evil of their ‘ deep intent ’ : Duncan is ‘ clear ’ , really has that freedom from guilt or stain that his wife had urged Macbeth to assume : in a sense he tries to do so here , in his defence of Duncan 's right to be treated with love and respect , and in his invocation of ‘ pity ’ , that constant test of humanity in Shakespeare .
16 Moreover , just as Moore thought that freedom from the naturalistic fallacy made one more ready to recognize that there is a plurality of basically different sorts of good thing , so Ross thought that freedom from this wrong definition of right and duty in terms of good made one ready to recognize that there is a plurality of grounds of obligation , of which the obligation to produce good and reduce bad is just one , or rather two , for he thinks the duty to prevent bad a distinct , and usually more stringent , duty than to produce good .
17 Given that , at least in the first year of the new council tax , there will still be two-tier authorities in the shires , I hope that the Bill will be as tight as a drum to ensure that the tiered authorities that are not up for election do not use that freedom from the ballot box — as happened in Nottinghamshire with the poll tax — to wreck the council tax in the way that they wrecked the poll tax in its first year .
18 After the war , German universities had rebuilt themselves with much help from overseas , particularly the US , but little direction from central government .
19 The left 's discomfort wins little sympathy from the Mr Jaroslaw Kaczynski , a Walesa loyalist whose choir-boy looks barely mask his ambition .
20 Those caught in the ‘ genteel poverty trap ’ can expect little sympathy from people earning the national wage of £15,790 or less .
21 They felt that a good deal of the South Western Board 's troubles were brought on by excessive expenditure and inadequate tariffs , and Steward found little sympathy from the other Boards , since some of them had equally serious system extension , reinforcement and standardisation problems , and were financing them by adequate tariffs .
22 Sukarno and his associates could expect little sympathy from the returning Allies ; surely then the Dutch would be restored ?
23 Emil gets little sympathy from the rest of the gang and then Clarence hits him with his car .
24 INJURY-hit Derry City will receive little sympathy from high-flying Shelbourne at Tolka Park tomorrow afternoon in what is expected to be a severe test for the Brandywell side ( kick-off 3.30pm ) .
25 Does n't that stem from … from your heartbreak over Gabriella ? ’
26 Alone of the Pacific species , N. emarginata shows something like a comparable variation in shell shape with exposure ( Crothers , 1984 ) , but the shell is so thin as to afford little protection from crabs regardless of its shape ( Kitching , 1976 ) and an ability to resist desiccation could be of great value to this highQQintertidal species in sites protected from continuous spray .
27 A long and ditinguished history offers little protection from the recession .
28 For two years he has been complaining that noise from the bells of St Mary the Virgin church at Down St Mary , Devon , has ruined his retirement .
29 Now it 's not fair on those others that are in the other room doing their exams there , and they 're just making all that noise from the typewriters in the other room .
30 She made little money from journalism , having criticized too many auras for her own good .
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