Example sentences of "[vb pp] back from [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 An Oxford aid worker who 's just come back from the Croatian capital Zagreb , says the situation there is getting out of hand .
2 ‘ Dear Loretta , ’ she read , ‘ I 've just come back from an official trip to Italy , and I squeezed in a visit to a peace camp while I was there .
3 Information can then be fed back from the cognitive system to the logogen system to influence the response of this system to the word which is going to be misread .
4 ‘ What has happened is that we have been clawed back from the disastrous level of whitefish we started at to a position in line with the top end of scientific advice . ’
5 The advantage the pure watercolour has over all other media is that it depends greatly on the light passing through the colour being reflected back from the white paper .
6 She had drawn back from a direct confrontation again , Guy realised .
7 It had been the Nordic states which had drawn back from the full implications of the Oslo and Ouchy Conventions of the 1930s .
8 Mr Pigdon started , his attention drawn back from the threatening sky .
9 THE extraordinary thing about Laura Ashley is not that it has been dragged back from the financial brink ; it is that it was ever pushed there in the first place .
10 The prosecution could not prove that he had encashed the giros because they are destroyed by the DSS twelve months after they have been received back from the clearing banks .
11 I still have n't heard back from the young lady who sent me the Valentine card ; did you really mean it ?
12 The tank has 50 kg each of coral sand and gravel and 300 kg of rock , which Jay brought back from a local quarry .
13 Erlich came close to her , kneeling on the rug he knew that Harry had brought back from a fast run to Beirut .
14 In the final sentence our attention is abruptly brought back from the remote horizon to the observer himself .
15 Besides having this example of baronial efficiency before his eyes , common sense might have suggested the importance of revealing at once the new conditions for ecclesiastical support which he had brought back from the Roman Council of 1099 .
16 The taste for sweet and highly spiced food , which made little use of the plants which grew easily in our temperate Northern climate , may well have been brought back from the Holy Land by returning Crusaders .
17 The corporation agreed , and even paid £200 so that the new shops would be set back from the previous building line .
18 The hotel has wonderful gardens full of olive trees and is set back from the main lakeside road , about 700 yards from Brenzone .
19 The four separate units which make up the Loutrouvia apartments are set back from the main road in pleasant surroundings .
20 They 're exclusive to Club 18–30 and are set back from the main road in t more peaceful location , although the busy centre of Benitses with all its bars , discos and tavernas is within easy walking distance .
21 This large , impressive hotel is set back from the main road in its own grounds , and clients can walk into Going or Ellmau in around 10–15 minutes .
22 Behind the church , which is set back from the main road and screened by trees , a sequestered lane soon passes the large hole of Hurtle Pot .
23 The house is set back from the main road and has wonderful views of the surrounding farmland .
24 It is set back from the main road , has a small shopping centre and typically Italian lakeside cafés , and is linked to the other lake resorts by steamers .
25 Situated about half a mile from the centre of Riva , the Parc Hotel Flora is set back from the main road , next to a highly popular ice-cream parlour under the same management .
26 Charles and Maurice Saatchi have stepped back from the top executive roles and have recruited Frenchman Robert Louis-Dreyfus as chief executive .
27 Charles and Maurice Saatchi have stepped back from the top executive roles and have recruited Frenchman Robert Louis-Dreyfus as chief executive .
28 I was not sure that I had been baptized ( having shrunk back from the outstretched hand with water in my late teens , believing baptism a piece of medieval nonsense ) , while wanting to be a member of the church .
29 The duvet , I 'd just taken back from the dry cleaners !
30 now when it comes to hard luck stories … or ripping sporting yarns … the tale of Oxford University 's Audley Lumsden takes some beating … on Tuesday at Twickenham he wins his blue in the annual varsity game … some achievement for a man who 's fought back from a broken neck and two fractured ankles
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