Example sentences of "from which [pers pn] [vb mod] [vb infin] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | From which we will get the benefit presumably when production 's done . |
2 | From which we will get the benefit presumably when production starts . |
3 | Two figures occur in the open literature from which we can deduce the amount released in the radioactive cloud that crossed England and Wales and Western Europe . |
4 | If we now take the opposite extreme , that of a gas , we do not know the positions of atoms , merely their mean velocities , and the only relation we can obtain between load and displacement derives from the gas law from which we can obtain the " bulk modulus ' of the gas and this " modulus ' is entirely entropic in origin , no elastic forces being involved . |
5 | Scene six is , as I have already suggested , the pivotal scene for Anderson — the point from which we can see a considerable change wrought in his character . |
6 | The great families of Rome had fortified towers or residences from which they might control the main routes in and out of the city . |
7 | It also seems that it might be helpful if teachers were aware of those among their pupils with particularly unsupportive home lives , that is , with few sources outside school from which they might derive a sense of their own value . |
8 | Partly because those who served in garrisons had to be ready to serve in the field when required ( for a castle acted as a base where soldiers could remain when not in the field , and from which they could control the countryside around by mounted raids within a radius of , say , a dozen miles ) , partly because of an increasing difficulty in securing active support from the nobility and gentry for the war in France , English armies at the end of the war sometimes included a greater ratio of archers to men-at-arms than ever before , sometimes 7:1 or even 10:1 , rather than the more usual 3:1 under Henry V and the parity of archers to men-at-arms normally found in the second half of the fourteenth century . |
9 | The Brighton Constabulary , whose marksmen had taken up positions from which they could command the Grand Hotel , was stood down after half an hour . |
10 | So next morning the thousand mosstroopers divided into three sections , two hundred to go with the Regent as decoys , two hundred to hide near Sunlaws ford and the remainder , six hundred , with a score or two of Heiton 's own men , to head for the Kale Water valley where Heiton would place them in position from which they could ambush the pursuit once Murray 's fleeing party was past . |
11 | They were set up to provide young people with basic , well-ordered accommodation from which they could experience the countryside . |
12 | They know , too , all the secret places of the bank : the nest of sandbags built during the War for the Home Guard ; the ruins of Marsh Edge Farm that lies in an angle of the tip hidden from the town ; the steps , cut in the slag-face , that lead down to the Ironworks Pier from which they can watch the boats . |
13 | This is a comprehensive slide collection of illustrators ' work , which is open for clients to visit and from which they can select the illustrators ' work , which is open for clients to visit and from which they can select the illustrators they consider to be most suitable for a particular job . |
14 | This is a comprehensive slide collection of illustrators ' work , which is open for clients to visit and from which they can select the illustrators ' work , which is open for clients to visit and from which they can select the illustrators they consider to be most suitable for a particular job . |
15 | Oddly enough , they are both at times connected to the person or horse suffering from extreme psychological stress or depression from which they can find no relief or escape . |
16 | It developed a fleet of ships , headed by the Rainbow Warrior , from which it could play the much-publicized role of unarmed protector of the world 's defenceless ecology . |
17 | In initiating my original purchase I incur an obligation to make a payment in money , but I in turn have to have a source from which I can acquire the money in the first place , and this will , directly or indirectly , put me into at least a temporary relationship with a great variety of people , including the reader who purchased this book from a bookstall and paid out money , some small fraction of which will eventually find its way back to myself . |
18 | The home in which we both live is a nonsense , and a nonsense from which I can see no way of ever extracting us . |
19 | He promised to bring me a few notes from which I could prepare a draft but he never did . ’ |
20 | The order of events was the same each year : first , the bus or train ride to whatever town The Walk was to be held in ; then being stationed somewhere from which I could see the parade . |
21 | I have never read of any firm in Britain from which I could purchase a light box . |
22 | I have never read of any firm in Britain from which I could purchase a light box . |
23 | Each help screen has an index from which you may select a topic . |
24 | Consider taking a cheap base in the area before term starts from which you can study the area and the vacancies , and be ready to pounce from close at hand . |
25 | A new menu will now appear on the screen , from which you can choose the style of garment that you require . |
26 | It achieves this by being a quick survey and appraisal of the history book and by immediately establishing a perspective from which you can view the book . |
27 | Writing the words in your book provides you with a ready-made store of words which you know your pupils have difficulty with , and from which you can construct a teaching programme . |
28 | In the next few pages are listed the branches of The Society of the Alexander Technique throughout the world , from which you can obtain the names and addresses of teachers in your area . |
29 | The other day we were drinking coffee on the terrace in front of my house , from which you can see the Wicklow Hills on clear evenings , and Clogwyn Du'r Arddu and Bus Stop Quarry ( which properly is called Allt Ddu closer at hand . |
30 | Once you 're satisfied that your spur socket wo n't result in the circuit serving too large a floor area , and you 've identified the socket as one from which you can run a spur , all you have to do is install your new socket where it 's needed , run the spur cable back to the socket that will feed it , and connect it in to the socket terminals . |