Example sentences of "[adv] from [noun] with " in BNC.
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1 | MR DICKINSON 'S preference ( April issue ) for English-style radio commentary stems entirely from familiarity with this format . |
2 | ‘ We shall get our friends down from London with the fish . ’ |
3 | Bill , who flew down from Scotland with other representatives of Scottish tennis for the funeral , was justly proud of what Winnie went on to achieve . |
4 | And Dorothy 's bringing granny Iris back down from Scotland with her . |
5 | Twice a week a Second Secretary accompanied by a High Commission security officer had driven down from Nairobi with a gutted digest of the Service 's affairs telexed from London . |
6 | Anyhow , Ludovico — ’ she laughed — ‘ these Italians all have such priceless names my dear-Ludovico is coming down from Florence with Constance . |
7 | Sir Drefoldwyn drifts down from Llanfair with a train for Welshpool in Spring . |
8 | Jane had ‘ missed her first ’ and went down from university with only a two-one in English Language and Literature , thus deprived of the academic career she had coveted with cowardice . |
9 | there were quite a bit Lyness , because I remember once the Hoy Head coming down from Stromness with a lot of party makers aboard it and cameras out and afore they knew where they were the admiralty men was there whipping the films out of the cameras . |
10 | In fact , Sir Adrian had no preconceived ideas about the sort of career he would follow when he came down from Cambridge with a degree in economics . |
11 | Jarvis came down from Cambridge with a degree in engineering ; not a very good one because he had done no work . |
12 | Onomatopoeic effects are generally of this kind , as we see from the opening sentence of D. H. Lawrence 's Odour of Chrysanthemums ( see 3.4 ) : The small locomotive engine , Number 4 , came clanking , stumbling down from Selston with seven full wagons . |
13 | From D. H. Lawrence , Odour of Chrysanthemums The small locomotive engine , Number 4 , came clanking , stumbling down from Selston with seven full waggons ( 1 ) . |
14 | Scotland eventually benefited greatly from Union with England in 1707 , but in the heyday of nineteenth-century expansion large parts of the western and northern periphery of Britain remained bitterly poor : the clearance of people to make way for sheep caused large-scale migration from the highlands and islands of Scotland , and a large part of the population of Ireland was forced to emigrate through the scarcity of food . |
15 | COMPUTONE ROLLS IN FROM ROSWELL WITH INTELLISERVER FOR TCP/IP ETHERNETS |
16 | Even so , the unpleasantness of these duties arises less from contact with things which the police consider either literally or metaphorically unclean ( such as decomposed bodies and the ‘ dregs and scum of society ’ ) , and more from the risk the police run of displaying emotion . |
17 | According to the proximity readout , the capsule was only a kilometre or so from contact with the surface of Tarvaras . |
18 | There are many individuals and community groups throughout the Highlands which would benefit highly from gatherings with this type of approach . |
19 | Even the dunce might come away from school with a phrase or two — — and the learned have sometimes gone to extraordinary lengths to get him into and out of their systems . |
20 | They picked up scores of children who should have been in class , and found that many stay away from school with their parents ' knowledge and consent . |
21 | More generally , political influences appear to have been especially important by way of a facilitating role of socialist ideology in broadening the structural form of unions away from concern with narrow and particularistic special interests . |
22 | Milla also said she steered away from romance with actors and models ‘ because they try to be prettier than me ’ . |
23 | Meanwhile , significant groups of intellectuals and artists , often in a somewhat modish , self-conscious way which attracted derision in the press , seemed to move away from identification with their society , so alien to their instincts did what they saw as the unacceptable , philistine face of Thatcherism appear to be . |
24 | But we are 90 minutes away from Wembley with a game to follow on our ground . |
25 | She checked out of the Palings and drove away from Longrock with the windows open and the early morning sun strong on her face . |
26 | Damian 's voice rose in fury as he strode to them , reached them and pushed Tony away from Rachel with a violence that made her cry out in horror as Tony stumbled backwards . |
27 | No 86244 The Royal British Legion ( named 2 November 1981 ) gets away from Crewe with the 16.00 ex-Euston on 16 August 1988 . |
28 | That caveat notwithstanding , those close to Mr Bush insist that there was an effort to get a non-military solution , and that if Saddam Hussein had reached out for it he could have walked away from Kuwait with something gained from his adventure . |
29 | In January 1980 , 76029 pulls away from Tinsley with the Deepcar trip freight . |
30 | I 'll tell you what comrades , I 'm sick to death of some people in the party shying away from association with us . |