Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [adv prt] from [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The increasing range of new and improved telecommunications services can have potentially profound effects on future travel and home-based employment opportunities , because certain types of jobs do not need face-to-face contact and may be carried out from home by the linking of the telephone to home computers or the use of other teleconferencing , text-handling or information-retrieval systems . |
2 | First you will be picked up from home in a luxury stretch limo courtesy of Elegance Limousines of Waterloo . |
3 | You will be picked up from school by Marjorie or me or your mother or all three of us from now on. , |
4 | In other words , a complete picture of the structure of competition must be built up from consideration of the location and form of the whole chain of activities that go together to make up a business . |
5 | Profiles of local customers could be built up from information from Training Enterprise Councils ( TECs ) , local press and radio , Chambers of Commerce , libraries , colleges , local advertising , and research agencies . |
6 | But even if they were to be drawn up from scratch with the express aim of reducing the level of severity in sentencing , there would still be a danger that discretion might simply be displaced to an earlier point in the system , such as the prosecutorial decision . |
7 | Take the kid to the big stores and they 'd be rigged out from top to bottom — all stamped PACA . |
8 | Oh I 'll be popping in from time to time . |
9 | Hoops used to be brought out from time to time , to become a craze , then be forgotten again . |
10 | We hope the branches and members w w will believe those reports because they will be the truth , and not some of the more highly coloured statements which I 'm sure will be put around from time to time . |
11 | Food should be put out from autumn to the end of winter , but not in spring and summer . |
12 | But psychological violence stays with you , it festers , it can be passed on from generation to generation . ’ |
13 | Staff at Slimbridge say their 7,000 waterfowl are unlikely to be affected by the outbreak , which ca n't be passed on from bird to bird . |
14 | It remains a secret , though it is said to be passed on from chairman to chairman in a discreet whisper . |
15 | The shape-specific polymers continued to be passed on from potency to potency even after none of the original solute was left in the solution . |
16 | Feasts are going to be cropping up from time to time as we move through the year , so it may be as well to explain that the word signifies , in Yorkshire , the yearly festival of the village or town . |