Example sentences of "[pers pn] can [vb infin] [adv] from the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ As far as I can make out from the little she said about what actually happened , the man who kidnapped them , there was only one at that point , was hidden in the back of their car when they got in .
2 However , it seems that as far as I can make out from the correspondence , the Commissionaires are split in their opinion as to the legality of action of the German government .
3 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 ’ .
4 A focal point is the inviting , good-sized pool where you can cool off from the heat of the sun .
5 Finally you can walk in from the A86 , an eight- or nine-mile hike , and then start the climb .
6 You can see better from the lower door , ’ I remarked , turning to go down the path .
7 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 .
8 And finally you can look out from the balcony , high up in the White Cliffs , from which Winston Churchill viewed the Battle of Britain .
9 It 's actually best if you can keep away from the dip altogether , and concentrate on the fresh bite of the unadulterated vegetables !
10 I am trying , within the context of the debate , to identify how we can move forward from the 1990s to the 21st century , the problems that we as a nation will have to face , our relationship with Europe and how we can learn from the nations that we have said are the best , such as Germany , and develop a sound strategic regional policy .
11 Not only did this new attitude towards children begin to emerge among educationalists in the middle decades of the eighteenth century , but we can deduce also from the success of small private academies , from the development of a new kind of children 's literature , and from the vastly increased expenditure on the amusements and pleasures of children , that parents , too , were no longer regarding their children as sprigs of old Adam whose wills had to be broken .
12 But what we can say is that we can select out from the group of solid tumours the ones that do badly .
13 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 .
14 ‘ Let's see if we can get in from the inside as this door is either seized up or securely locked . ’
15 Constable spent time closely studying clouds alone , and indeed we can learn much from the Masters by observing the colours they used .
16 " There are those who say that we can turn away from the world , that we have no special role , no special place .
17 STUDENTS on a part-time MSc computer course to start next year at Kingston Polytechnic will get their own microcomputers so that they can work away from the polytechnic 's classrooms .
18 EUROTUNNEL chairman Sir Alastair Morton is already planning for the moment he can step down from the £9 billion project .
19 He can come back from the Moon and help you . ’
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