Example sentences of "[pron] [det] [noun] from " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Hand me that leash from the back seat , Betty . ’
2 In anomie theory the impetus that pushes people into crime is that the ambitions for status and pecuniary success that they share with everyone else are thwarted by the restrictions on the opportunities to achieve them that result from low socio-economic status .
3 The belt tying the skirt on drew the bodice edges in round the breasts ( if they were to be exposed ) and presumably lent them some support from the sides and from below .
4 Got involved and cooled it down a bit and er and found some of the people some premises , and I think got them some money from Duke of Edinburgh award scheme or something , to buy music music equipment .
5 I was careful to find them some distance from Upper Thames Street .
6 THANK YOU , J R SMITH OF CANTERBURY , for sending me this cutting from the Canterbury Extra , offering the ultimate Austin for sale …
7 I said it was about the photographs , but even before I 'd finished talking , he gave me this message from Marius to … you know … to get lost . ’
8 6pm : Thinking only of my comfort , Mrs Fishfinger kindly throws me some bedding from an upstairs window .
9 Do you like me Christmas frock , the , our David sent me some money from America
10 ‘ Can you get me some stuff from the village ?
11 Cos I 'm hoping cos I 've got a in Manchester get me some recordings from the public library .
12 I once asked Alec Motyer , who was the wise and saintly principal of my theological college , how to hear the guidance of God , and he showed me some verses from Isaiah 50:4 , 5 which he called a deep place of guidance in the Bible :
13 I have in front of me some photographs from a collection of settlers ' memories .
14 She brought me some oranges from my orchard but I could n't eat them .
15 Please pray that as the need for ‘ counselling ’ is recognised ( and the need is very great ) that maybe they can give me some time from working duties to provide a ‘ service ’ in this area .
16 ‘ Get me some plectrums from that shop in Charing Cross Road ! ’
17 I 've taken someone this afternoon from Highdown just until the half term when they should go to a special school .
18 Then I decided I was going to make my own choices from now on .
19 I heard my own voice from a remote distance ask , ‘ Do you refer to Mary Shelley , sir ? ’
20 ‘ I 'll make my own way from there . ’
21 You only need to drop me in town , and I can make my own way from there ! ’
22 These six criteria , then , have shaped my own research from the start of the 1980s .
23 But mostly I imagined you asleep , left utterly to yourself in a situation where my own absence from your life did not matter :
24 I 'm going to mind my own business from now on . ’
25 I will feel easier in my own mind from now on . ’
26 He lit himself another cigar from the butt of the previous one .
27 He poured himself some water from a chilled carafe .
28 By 1915 expenditure was £263 , by 1916 £420 : ‘ nothing shows more clearly the growth of our work than the way in which this help from the government has doubled , trebled , even quadrupled since the school started four years ago ’ ( South West Ham Health Society 1916–17 ) .
29 I 'd love to make a black version , in which some kids from South Central LA , who get bussed out to the Sand Fernando Valley ( affluent LA suburb ) , decide not to go to class and start tramping around Fernando doing what they did in that movie .
30 Plenary session in which these questions from the groups are explored .
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