Example sentences of "[modal v] [vb infin] [adv] from [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Think again — T J Rodgers , president and chief executive of Cypress Semiconductor Corp told a Congressional committee on Wednesday last week that there is no monolithic support for Clinton 's budget proposals — the government should not try to build information networks , but ‘ untangle the morass of bureaucracy and regulations ’ that prevent existing fibre optic networks from reaching homes , he said ; he called for deeper cuts in the budget deficit and the end of ‘ wasteful and unnecessary ’ government programmes ; ‘ Washington should stay away from the intricacies of high-tech competition … it should focus instead on the infrastructure of competition , ’ he said ; he also presented written comments criticising the Clinton plan from officials or directors of Amdahl Corp , Cisco Systems Inc , Conner Peripherals Inc and Sun Microsystems Inc .
2 ‘ The international community must take over from the states that fail to fulfil their obligations , ’ he said .
3 ‘ Someone might look over from the gate-towers and catch the gleam of it .
4 let you know they 'll come back from the letters .
5 All he needed — as far as anyone could make out from the hogsheads of salted pilchards that were assembled in two separate groups at the harbour — was one more good catch and victory , together with Martha 's hand , would be his .
6 As far as they were concerned , and like most Arab players in the narcotics game , the DEA was welcome to play one side off against another , so long as they could watch safely from the sidelines .
7 Was it true ? she demanded of the silly girl : that she 'd run away from the boys when they were only trying to be friendly ?
8 And while neither manager was wholly satisfied with events , Liam Brady could take more from the proceedings , in which his side dominated the second-half .
9 Nothing could seem further from the days of J.P .
10 He 'd come straight from the fields , his smell was more what the child was used to .
11 I told Shama of the years that Thesiger had spent in Iraq with the Marsh Arabs and then in Iran , that now he had a small house in Kenya deep in the country where he could get away from the towns .
12 When there were , the engine driver would stop the train and get out of his cab and shoo them off , and sometimes he 'd wait so that everyone could get down from the carriages and stretch their legs and pick blackberries before they set off again .
13 Although it is not possible to carry all the bargain lines offered by the company , the Trailer will stock many of Uppingham 's repeatable ranges and special yarn requests can be ordered by prior arrangement. , The prices of all items sold in the travelling shop are inclusive of VAT and may vary slightly from the prices charged in the warehouse .
14 . ’ Another woman , repeating with incredulity that such things could happen while the Führer was standing by his soldiers at the Front in the fight against Bolshevism , said blessings would go out from the crucifixes in the schools ‘ not only for the children themselves , but also for our Führer and his soldiers , who are our sons , fathers , and brothers ’ .
15 Have I said I 've said those would come in from the departments .
16 The question they wish to answer is ‘ Which pupils will excel in this area , will make useful contributions or will benefit most from the opportunities which are in our power to grant ? ’
17 All in all the Quiz Quest turned out to be a really good day out and , provided you all send in your sponsorship money , Amnesty will benefit greatly from the proceeds .
18 All these projects will benefit greatly from the advances made by the Degas retrospective of 1988–89 , which bravely integrated sculptures with paintings and pastels in both exhibition and scholarly catalogues .
19 Senior project officer Brian Spink said : ‘ In the spring , new young shoots will come up from the stumps and ‘ pleachers ’ to form a thick hedge .
20 Despite the crushing of the students , he still hoped that ‘ a phoenix will rise up from the ashes . ’
21 New buds will ramify out from the ends of any broken fibres .
22 The interpretation of palaeoecology is rendered difficult because the composition of fossil faunas may differ radically from the communities from which they were derived .
23 Oxford Practice Grammar contains over a hundred double-page units with the exercises facing the explanations so that students can glance across from the exercises to the rules and back .
24 Below , the islands of Rum and Canna can be seen and on the horizon to the west you can look over from the hills of South Uist to Barra Head .
25 Having said that , however , we can tease out from the textbooks of the sixties an implicit theoretical perspective that bore on groups and was designed to make sense of British politics as a whole .
26 Two rules must be obeyed when exploiting them : local cooling , close to the heat pump or its heat exchanger , must be no faster than heat can flow in from the surroundings ; and the source temperature must not be lowered more than a few degrees below its undisturbed level .
27 As a matter of fact there 's pride , pride in that a picture can get away from the lollipops and still be inoffensive and commercially pleasing .
28 With cars , tractors and lorries , farmers can travel daily from the lowlands to the hills .
29 All I can find out from the organisers is that ‘ preliminary judging will take place between 1st June and 14th July and final judging will be completed in August and results announced in early September ’ .
30 Constable spent time closely studying clouds alone , and indeed we can learn much from the Masters by observing the colours they used .
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