Example sentences of "got from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 That 's a note he got from the Editor the other day , giving him the sack . ’
2 All we got from the insurance company was a sum for fixtures and fittings .
3 Well , Maudie 'ands 'im a pile o' leaflets she got from the church an' tells 'im ter 'and 'em out ter the carmen .
4 ‘ The reaction I got from the Twin Cities race was really out of proportion , ’ he says with appropriate modesty .
5 Erm , take some time off to read erm the handbook we got from the housing finance seminar because clearly he does n't understand his contacts .
6 The Komsomols themselves knew they did not understand the instructions they got from the party cell , and said so , but received no advice as a result .
7 The further they got from the rave the more bodies they had to step over .
8 you actually exchange , as soon as you 've exchanged contracts we 've got to get insured you see but erm I mean on the letter we got from the solicitor on Saturday it said , it , it looks as though your purchaser 's ready to exchange contracts in the forthcoming week
9 So far as we can tell , the men-folk ruled in every sphere ; but it may be that the further one got from the world of high feudalism the less of a slave the woman became ; it is certainly true , in a rather different way , that the Norman Conquest brought both a more complete feudalism and a fall in the status of women .
10 And then the other one is the one that I got from the library by Luhmann .
11 Could have done without the lip I got from the scouse stallholders though ( sample : ‘ The League Title cost a fortune in them days … ’ ) .
12 But the further they got from the area , the easier it became .
13 ‘ But all I needed to do was look at the support I got from the club and the fans when we were at the bottom last season .
14 but I put him on some medicine I got from the chemist and it seems to have calmed it down but his nose is more er hot and cold
15 The figures actually which I got from the director yesterday are that the department is counting four hundred and ten vacancies of those four hundred and ten , two hundred and thirty four are out of commission , they 're in homes being refurbished seventy two are in blocked places , that is double rooms being lived in by a widow or widower where er they 'd previously shared it with the spouse or er disability reasons , health reasons , behaviour reasons of a resident er in a previously shared room .
16 Adam could afford it because of the money he got from the sale of Wyvis Hall and later from the sale of the London house he bought with the money from the sale of Wyvis Hall .
17 He knows that Grampian regional council is bound by statute to say how much it got from the sale ; it can not simply say that it will not tell anyone .
18 That 's what he got from the post , I bet he bought two of them .
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