Example sentences of "[noun pl] have [verb] from [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Should twelve months have expired from date of service , without judgment having been entered by the plaintiff on an admission , the action is struck out and can not be revived .
2 In a year when all other parts of the charitable sector have been hit by the drop in disposable income , environmental charities have gone from strength to strength .
3 The Tyne yards have lived from order to order with a steadily decreasing total work force .
4 That would be the normal price bracket for a Dior or Chanel creation — but now the supermodels have gone from catwalk to catalogue .
5 Japan 's large , integrated steel mills have switched from coal to oil as well as implementing stringent energy efficiency improvements .
6 Scottish ospreys have gone from strength to strength .
7 French financial markets have benefited from deregulation in the 1980s , and the last few years have witnessed an acceleration in financial innovation in France .
8 British Government spokesmen have suggested from time to time that the Treaty on European Union represents a reversal of the process of centralisation within the Community .
9 Rochlin appropriates for masculinity , albeit in a form so highly selective it might hardly be recognized , that sense of the inherent instability of identity which Lacanians and others have taken from psychoanalysis for feminism .
10 Suffolk County Council has long been over-stretched on the conservation side , and comparable houses have suffered from lack of expert advice .
11 The view is excellent from all seats , although the two passengers in the middle of the benches have to lean from side to side to make the most of it .
12 In Britain alone , more than a hundred thousand jobs have gone from farming in the last five years .
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