Example sentences of "[noun] [to-vb] back from the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In a television address , he called on deputies to pull back from the brink .
2 In a television address , he called on deputies to pull back from the brink .
3 The time taken by the sound of each click to bounce back from the rock to the bird , enables the swiftlet to judge just how far away it is from the rock wall ahead .
4 Pigeon-toed beneath her crinoline , Louisa clapped his performance , and the sound of her clapping sped across the ice to echo back from the trees .
5 Mr Whittington proved that the LCC had got themselves a very good orator to transfer back from the EMS when war was over .
6 It always feels like an admission of failure to come back from the Continent and have nothing to show for it .
7 It did show excellent character to bounce back from the start … one plus point from the first half .
8 McAllister had five birdies in the space of seven inward holes to turn back from the brink of disaster .
9 It is this incredible flexibility that allows us to juggle page layouts in just a few minutes and produce a fresh piece of artwork each time rather than wait hours , even days , for the re-worked page to come back from the artist 's studio .
10 In such cases of disagreement between professionally and theoretically interested parties , it sometimes proves a useful corrective to step back from the problem and to enquire into ‘ folk ’ conceptions regarding the relevant issues .
11 It had taken them ages to get back from the Lock and now the evening was drawing in .
12 That day , as we waited for the doctor to come back from the mountains , was one of deep anxiety for the whole family .
13 Error comes in if one over-interprets the relevance of these conclusions , by forgetting the artificial constraints of the experiment and instead assuming that in real life , outside the laboratory so to say , such changes involving only a single variable can actually take place ; that it is a simple matter to extrapolate back from the artificiality of laboratory isolation to the complex , rich interconnectedness of the real world .
14 ‘ Sometimes it is important for the individual to step back from the fray , ’ said , ‘ and describe to themselves what the work problems are and build up an action programme for themselves .
15 But although there was ample room lengthways for sitters to draw back from the blaze sufficiently for comfort , there was less space broadways-on , so that the pairs had to sit fairly close together — which suited Alexander Ramsay very well , for he shared a bench with Mariot .
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