Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] from [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Of course , if government spending were financed by an increase in the money supply , the curve would also shift to the right to and the interest rate increase might be avoided as the economy would move from to rather than from to .
2 Most initiatives arose from the ‘ movement left ’ — that amorphous network of local groupings , cultural ventures and autonomous campaigns that was the legacy of the libertarian revolts of the late 1960s and early 1970s — rather than from within the existing labour movement ( apart from the Institute for Workers ' Control , which in the mid-1970s looked as though it might become a major national forum for the newer movements of the 1970s and the earlier generation of intellectuals and trade unionists who had quit the Communist Party after 1956 ) .
3 Perhaps that 's what W O meant : it 's not that there are no faults , just that from behind the wheel of a Bentley you do n't give a damn .
4 Rufus threw his cigarette away and from behind her laid his hand lightly on Mary 's bare shoulder .
5 Whether you are perceiving the planet from only a few feet up or from around the lofty peaks of mountains and hillsides , excellent sight ( or sonar ) is almost a prerequisite : there are hosts of obstacles to circumnavigate and far distances to discern if you travel by air !
6 The introduction of competition and credit control triggered off a considerable amount of comment and criticism from the City as well as from within academic circles .
7 And in his turn , Lord Dersingham would never have thought of recruiting one of his servants from anywhere except from among those born on his own land .
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