Example sentences of "to [pers pn] from the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Spain , Portugal , Ireland and Greece also oppose an early enlargement , albeit for rather different reasons : they fear that the current transfer of resources to them from the richer countries — above all , from Britain and Germany — might be put at risk , and have made it clear that their support for any growth in the size of the Community is contingent on their receipt of guaranteed levels of Cohesion payments .
2 The ‘ conversion ’ of the UK government has been briefly described earlier ; it is manifested in their July 1989 commitment to spend £10m. on climate change research in 1989/90 and the confident request to them from the Advisory Board for the Research Councils ( ABRC ) for an extra £11m. in 1990 and £13m. in the two succeeding years for additional environmental research .
3 Most degree courses have very flexible structures and allow students to include subjects of special interest to them from the large selection available in the University .
4 Is my right hon. Friend aware that some British companies have not received the compensation due to them from the Turkish authorities controlling northern Cyprus ?
5 Further funding will cover , in part at least , the shortfall between the amount allocated to them from the common fund and their total expenditure .
6 All Leslie 's letters to me from the sealed camp at Fairford bore ( as well as the R.A.F. censor 's stamp ) undated postmarks .
7 ‘ But Ken was making it very clear to me from the very beginning that I was not going to get away with anything , ’ Pertwee told me .
8 The fly , which has settled on my forehead and reads to me from the Sixth Book of the Aeneid , is the same fly which buzzes round the head of Virgil in Mantua .
9 Their abstract certitudes seemed far removed to him from the inherent contradictions in human nature .
10 He could not find Strawberry but after a time Cowslip came up to him from the other end of the hall .
11 Something in her had responded to him from the first moment they 'd met .
12 Surely there could be no gain to him from the old lady 's death ?
13 He , too , suffered from an occasional enlightening vision which came to him from the dim past and which he must have suppressed at the time …
14 When Waterford Wedgwood Canada 's Gail Lilly volunteered to help out in a major international athletics event , she never dreamed she would find a pen-pal who would write to her from the other side of the world .
15 For the next few days Ruth spent most of her waking hours with Anna , reading to her from the small collection of books Mrs Carson had brought on board , playing games , making up stories .
16 Indeed , some estimates have suggested that if the Exchequer received all the tax due to it from the black economy , the basic rate of income tax might be cut by 10 per cent .
17 No need to disturb the household , if we can come round to it from the other side . ’
18 The annexe need not have been roofed , although there was access to it from the main part of the building .
19 An image copy of the Working-Set is taken whenever a new dictionary range is transferred to it from the Main Database .
20 Trudgill writes : speakers are not capable of acquiring the correct underlying phonological distinction unless they are exposed to it from the very beginning , before they themselves have even begun to speak .
21 It is the most potent poison known to us from the entire animal world .
22 Most of my new friends were paras , and we used to sit around listening to our Sergeant-Major , who had been seconded to us from the 3rd Battalion after an exemplary performance in the Falklands .
23 Because , about a week before John drew our attention to that matter of concern , I had prayerfully chosen a theme for tonight , based on the set gospel — the passage that has just been read to us from the first chapter of John .
24 But the world of chapter 26 is not only familiar to us from the preceding chapters of Genesis .
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