Example sentences of "[adv prt] from [art] [adj] [noun sg] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The car drew to a halt by a green sward of carefully tended lawn which ran down from an impressive-looking office building towards the river .
2 The Pit derives its name from the steep galley down from an old tin mine , which the Badlands surfers must negotiate to reach the beach below .
3 The coast ( or cliff-top ) walk from the hostel in the other direction led to the delightful settlement of Robin Hood 's Bay , where the slipway resembles a drawbridge let down from the towering sea walls .
4 Opposite the clock , angels and bishops stare moodily down from the Holy Trinity Column in what is now the middle of Red Army Square .
5 The kitchen is thus three steps down from the living-room floor level and is paved with the same material — York stone slabs approximately 60mm ( 2–1/2in ) thick , below which a low-pressure piped hot water central-heating system is installed .
6 The chamber is then flooded from below with 3375 litres ( 750gal ) of dip , which is pumped in from a nearby vacuum tanker .
7 Boyd took the ball in from the one yard line to reduce the Tornadoes lead to one point .
8 Work has also been contracted in from the French firm Matra SA and the US company Rockwell International Inc as well as from Digital Equipment Corp .
9 Before Chas could reply , Ace burst in from the main access corridor .
10 She could tell she was going to get no response from Coffin , although he was being polite , when a crowd of youngsters swarmed in from the local youth club .
11 ‘ A number of local residents commented that there was already a disproportionate ratio of pigs to people in the locality and although proposals to extend the operation would have led to some improvement , in that a new farrowing house would have been built to bring the pigs in from the old farm buildings , in fact the larger pig population would increase the scope for offensive odours to permeate the village . ’
12 Jones also made the try with a perfect chip through from a five metre scrum .
13 But it 's , it 's , it 's it sort a it 's , I think carrying through from the old borough days
14 The County Council took into account a wide range of considerations , in including the the information that came through from the local plan authorities , in the preparation of their local plans over the past ten years or more .
15 To bring information , the messenger : " I 'm getting a message through from an alien life form . "
16 ‘ We need to face the frustrations left over from the second world war ’ , he says .
17 Yes I put out an appeal to er my readers to search their attics and their er lofts and their garden sheds for all the things they might have left over from the second World War .
18 They would have preferred process control and development staff to have established the new processes , and would have preferred to recruit ‘ green labour ’ to the new machines so that ‘ bad habits ’ would not have been carried over from the old production process .
19 ‘ Aga-sagas have taken over from the steamy sex bonkbusters of the Eighties .
20 Outside , Baker Street was closed down for the weekend except for the Barracuda Club , which had taken over from the original School Dinners restaurant after it moved across the road to usurp the No. 34 Wine Bar .
21 It is the day when Jean Fabre , the president-in-waiting , takes over from the long-serving incumbent Albert Ferrasse .
22 Sadat had ordered photographs of the Shah , left over from an earlier state visit , to be mounted along the route .
23 Breaking off from a hectic touring schedule in Scotland , Melanie and Olly slip across to Ireland to play one date here at Festival .
24 A promotion-chasing football team has taken the day off from a hectic training schedule to record a pop song .
25 Even the All Blacks squad , who were present , broke off from a cheerful public relations exercise of signing autographs to note two-try Guscott 's regal progress that began from a standing start and a little shuffling half-circle to create the space .
26 Many of them were also completely cut off from the normal trading conditions that enable people to exercise choice .
27 They took off from the amphibious assault ship U S S Okinowa on a routine patrol , but a short while later , all voice and radar contact was suddenly lost .
28 Only when a package burst open did the sheriff receive a tip off from the postal service U P S.
29 Her insistence on setting up lone stations cut off from the central missionary settlement led her into conflict with the authorities , who often thwarted her persistent applications to go further ‘ up-country ’ .
30 The EF1-11 radar jamming plane had taken off from the Upper Heyford airbase .
  Next page