Example sentences of "[to-vb] from [pron] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Experts continue to disagree about how to extrapolate from one to the other , although it is generally accepted that even the smallest dose carries a health risk .
2 ‘ And so , ’ I continue , ‘ the suntan becomes fashionable and it 's no longer as necessary as it was — taking Robinson Crusoe by way of example — to hide from it under a parasol in order to conserve that fairness of skin threatened by the desert island climate .
3 Pleas for understanding began to pour from him in a stream .
4 Shortly before his death he complained with much justification that his Belgian subjects were refusing to receive from him as a gift benefits which the French were at the same moment extorting from Louis XVI by a great upheaval .
5 By and large most cognitive processes are a mixture of the two and in fact it depends on the context that you 're operating them in , we tend to be able to split from one to the other .
6 However , the drafter should remember that problems frequently arise where one party to a contract seeks to escape from it on the grounds that the other is in breach of a condition , and that the time for performance of obligations ( other than payment of money ) under a commercial contract is normally " of the essence " : a failure to perform on time in accordance with the contract will therefore justify the other party in terminating the contract ( see Bunge Corpn v Tradax Export SA [ 1981 ] 1 WLR 711 ) .
7 In fact , such was the response to our initial soundings that we now wish to broaden the discussions to include a much larger audience and would therefore be keen to hear from anyone with a view to express or , an interest in this area .
8 The police would like to hear from anyone at the dance who may have seen the incident .
9 They said it appeared the death was not suspicious but they would like to hear from anyone in the area between 7am and 8am yesterday .
10 POLICE would like to hear from anyone in the Birch Road area of Headley Down at 9.45 p.m. on Saturday when a brick was thrown through the ground floor kitchen window of a house causing £30 worth of damage .
11 We 'd like to hear from you with the results of how you got on and how this book may have helped you decide what you want to do .
12 He seemed to go from her for a moment , then he recollected where he was .
13 The FBI is trying to slide from one to the other , by stealth .
14 The contract includes agreement not only about what new skills and knowledge need to be learned but also about why they are needed , how they will be applied and what is expected to result from them within the school or office .
15 By the way erm for non-metro districts they can choose whether they can have election by thirds or not , and you do occasionally get r you do occasionally you can get , get very occasional examples of a , of a dis of a district council opting to switch from one to the other .
16 Much of Sussex 's early medieval wealth was built on the close relationship between farming life and industry ; although many villages had specialists in each there must have been many with dual occupations , men able to shift from one to the other as the season or demand dictated .
17 The distance between any two points would then he proportional to the number of neurones a message must traverse to get from one to the other ; it would also be roughly proportional to the time taken for a neural message to travel between them .
18 You know and getting to them , I know how to get from one to the other without going , you know ?
19 It is relatively easy to move from one to the other .
20 Doreen 's eyes continued to dart from one to the other ; then she made an attempt to put Lucy in her place by reminding her that she was merely a member of the staff .
21 In a situation where it is required to perform some task , the reaction time can be seen to include the following : ( a ) the time taken by the stimulus to activate the sense organ and for impulses to travel from it to the brain , ( b ) the central processes concerned with the identification of the signal and the response to it , and ( c ) the time required to energise the muscles and produce the correct response .
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