Example sentences of "[verb] [indef pn] from [art] " in BNC.

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61 ‘ But we deserved something from the game .
62 It was Mellor who salvaged something from the disastrous 1990 Broadcasting Bill , which presaged the widely-ridiculed independent television franchise round .
63 All the windows in the farmhouse had been shattered , the whole scene resembling something from the Blitz .
64 But at least she could be certain of one thing : it was n't a place where there was a risk of meeting anyone from the power station , at least not anyone who mattered .
65 Month by month , the chances of saving anything from the wreckage of Bosnia grow less .
66 Redken would recommend a new permanent wave called TRUST which combines both acid and alkaline ingredients to create anything from a soft body wave to springy , resilient curls .
67 The grid size can easily be increased or decreased at any stage during the design process , thus allowing you to create anything from a tiny motif to a large electronic or intarsia design that would cover a complete garment piece .
68 Imbert has decided not to sell anything from the show because of the poor state of the art market , and with Editions du Regard is publishing a book of the exhibition which will sell , at a loss , for FFr 250 .
69 Properly interpreted and monitored , the quarter mill map can prevent anything from a stray into controlled airspace to a fatal accident .
70 We also have nt conceded anything from a corner or cross ( except that goal vs norwich … but you could nt expect him to get that one ! ) .
71 As I had no access to the Swansea accounts during that time , it was clear I could n't have embezzled anything from the company .
72 Do you think y er you and your your mates who were out , do you think you learnt anything from the strike ?
73 As well as putting the finishing touches to their epic 20-track album ‘ Gorgeous ’ — ‘ the most diverse thing we 've ever done ’ — DJing 808 duo the Spinmasters have been spinning discs over in the US , while Graham Massey has been remixing everyone from the Sugarcubes to Future Sound Of London .
74 They had come to expect nothing from a disenfranchised people except violence and anarchy .
75 I 've got someone from the village coming in every day to check that no one tries making a nuisance of themselves .
76 Erm , and I also understand that this is the first time you 've actually had someone from the private sector , er , whose been invited to er , address your A G M so , I 'd like to thank you for the privilege , and for also for the opportunity to speak on a subject which I personally er , find of of great interest .
77 ‘ In an ideal world , I would have been delighted to have had someone from the university on the trust . ’
78 We tend to assess people through what they say and the way they say it , to come to conclusions about whether we will like someone from the way they present themselves in words .
79 We 've got somebody from the Oxford English er dictionary compilation er arena , with us today and I , I , I 'm almost tempted to ask Clare what wh what , what the definition of the word quality is actually .
80 Sendei obtained one from the dispenser and tossed it to her .
81 He is being wooed by three counter-arguments : first , that when it comes to big , company-wide computer systems , customers still prefer to buy everything from a single , proven supplier ; second , that mainframes will remain at the heart of many of tomorrow 's systems , in which a network of PCs will be served by a central processor ; and third , that IBM is moving away from being hardware-dominated to become , increasingly , a one-stop-shop for computer consultancy and services .
82 This is where you drop something from a sentence or phrase and you leave a word or a phrase out .
83 1a identify the place value of a column or a digit in it for values of units , tens , hundreds and thousands ; 1b represent in numerals a whole number given in words ; 1c represent in words a whole number given in numerals ; 1d order whole numbers ; 1e provide a whole number which is between two given numbers in size ; 1f represent a given whole number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ; 1g demonstrate understanding of relationships of the form 13 x 8 ( 10 x 8 ) + ( 3 x 8 ) .
84 The pupil can represent a given whole number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ( Example 81 ) .
85 2a The pupil can identify the place value of a column or a digit in it for values of tenths , hundredths and thousandths ; 2b the pupil can represent in numerals a decimal number given in words ; 2c the pupil can represent in words a decimal number given in numerals ; 2d the pupil can order decimal numbers ; 2e the pupil can provide a decimal number which is between two given numbers in size ; 2f the pupil can represent a given decimal number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ; 2g the pupil can understand relationships of the form 1.3 x 8 ( I x 8 ) + ( 0.3 x 8 ) ; 2h the pupil can represent a fraction in tenths or hundredths as a decimal ; 2i the pupil can represent a decimal with not more than two decimal places as a fraction .
86 The pupil can represent a given decimal number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ( Example 89 ) .
87 no they 'll think that you 've nicked one from the Co-Op wo n't they ?
88 ‘ Me old man 's got one from the market to burn but you can 'ave it , ’ said Rosa , who had already started with her sixth child .
89 He could have got one from the kitchen , but I expect he 'd locked up after he 'd brought the supper up . ’
90 It made her feel more at home , already , to steal something from the larder .
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