Example sentences of "[adv] from [noun] at " in BNC.

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1 He died suddenly from typhoid at the Hotel Maurice , Paris , 18 May 1872 .
2 Commenting on its fiscal 1993 figures , which saw the company soar through the $2,000m sales mark for the year ( see page five ) Dell Computer Corp said cash and investments totalled $95m at January 31 , down from $155m at the beginning of the fiscal year , but the company added a new $200m revolving line of credit with nine multinational banks ; it invested $47m in capital expenditures over the course of the year , primarily in telecommunications , facilities expansion and systems .
3 The second suspect was a resident of Consett , but on the night in question his wife had given birth to their first child , and the doctor and the midwife both vouched for the fact that the man had never left the house after he came in from work at half-past five until he went to work the next morning , an hour after he had heard his son first cry .
4 Charlie Miller came in from work at six-fifteen .
5 Nikita Smidovitch , whose team of 20 inspectors flew in from Bahrain at dawn , said the surprise inspections were specifically related to the long-range missiles .
6 Wolstenholme even chipped in from 25ft at the 17th for a three .
7 G B Fan , we 've got it coming in from Stuttgart at eight twenty .
8 Mr Birt said yesterday he had been ‘ enormously heartened ’ by the strong support he had received in from colleagues at the BBC .
9 The truth began to be known only when returned veterans started to piece the story together from hearsay at home and to voice their fears to Congressmen .
10 Ok , I see your point now ; - ) Im sure he would nt need to learn much from Wilko at all tactically etc , maybe in the practical aspects of mgt — so I cant see MUCH benefit from sitting next to him in the dug out .
11 And senior teachers , especially heads , have the additional option of the flight into bureaucracy , or into the development of a national reputation for something or other , that enables them to spend considerable time away from school at important meetings .
12 Hill ran away from school at the age of twelve to work on an uncle 's farm .
13 In the opposite direction trains are booked away from Stratford-upon-Avon at to arrive at Hall Green at hours .
14 In France , a conspiracy of Calvinists and ‘ political ’ Huguenots against the Guises , which ended with the ‘ Tumult of Amboise ’ in mid March with its hideous reprisals , left the Guises victorious , but it deflected their attention away from Scotland at a critical moment .
15 Units more than 12″ away from Azhag at the start of your turn are affected exactly as normal .
16 All of the courage , the new-found confidence which Dr Neil had given her , with his love , drained away from Sally-Anne at the sight of Dr Neil 's face when Havvie told him who she was .
17 ‘ I have a brother , but he 's away from home at present , ’ wrote Joanna tactfully to a Greek pen-friend .
18 This was Peter Lorre 's first film but he had been acting for ten years in a career which had begun with his running away from home at the age of 15 and which bore many similarities to the careers of other American and European actors who had arrived in Hollywood already .
19 And I th , I think about a great deal because it 's a very strange , it 's a very strange thing to talk about but when I came to Suffolk , I might have told you this before er , I had hardly been away from home at all , I was only seventeen when I first met him
20 I think that 's the only word for it , and we have seen United away from home at Bristol City and West Bromwich Albion , play so badly .
21 Probably all three of them were away from court at the time of the murder : Waddo was certainly in the retinue of Chilperic 's daughter Rigunth , who was en route for Spain , where she was to have been married .
22 Sometimes there were short races between the Bletchley and Newport workmen 's trains as both were booked away from Wolverton at the same time .
23 Admittedly there was more than a hint of urban overcrowding two doors away from William at no. 21 , where a glove cutter , a walnut-veneer repairer and a book finisher were living with their families — but that was exceptional .
24 Stanley Hoffmann argued that de Gaulle underestimated the resilience of Soviet ideology in Russia and Eastern Europe , and as a result " out of wishful thinking and premature anticipation , imagined in Russia a far greater move away from totalitarianism at home , a greater willingness to let a " hundred flowers " bloom in Eastern Europe … than existed " .
25 Some of its members were actually away from Westminster at crucial stages in the campaign .
26 She and husband Tom have bought a villa a stone 's throw from the BBC 's Spanish soap set — so they can get away from tourists at home !
27 There were at least three overlapping sets of arguments underlying the drive away from segregation at eleven-plus : each represents an advance upon its predecessor and towards some pure ideal of comprehensiveness .
28 Another current trend in historical writing in South Asia is to move away from analysis at the local , regional or national levels and instead attempt to trace the linkages between various localities and the wider society , economy and culture .
29 And a few seconds ago an urgent message had come through from GCHQ at Cheltenham .
30 Over the last decade or so , feminists have moved progressively from attempts at nonsexist dictionary-making to attempts at feminist lexicography which radically question the nature of the whole enterprise .
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