Example sentences of "[pers pn] from this [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 How important could you from this work of making known this father 's name and kingdom , he said to his disciples my food is for me to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work why did Jesus consider God 's work to be as important as school ?
2 ‘ Get you from this parish .
3 ‘ Yet you must have help to free you from this condition and , frankly , I have found myself at a loss .
4 I got drunk on rhum by myself at the Rotonde and ran up and down the streets crying and ringing bells and saying ‘ Save me from this man ! ’
5 Those are just some of the memories I will take with me from this year 's Ryder Cup to join those I have of my previous three captaincies and I wish the next Ryder Cup Captain as much joy and success as I 've been lucky enough to experience .
6 ‘ Till my husband returns , and rescues me from this misery ! ’
7 It was clear to me from this letter that we were engaged again , if that was what I wanted , and I did ; also , that the natural happiness and buoyancy of Leslie 's nature had reasserted itself , now that it had been released from what he had felt to be the cramping frustration of home service .
8 Take me from this place .
9 Deliver me from this distress !
10 Erm two things occur to me from this criterion .
11 But er I did two or three hundred , four hundred , five hundred a day and I got fed up on it and I said to the gaffers one day , if you do n't change me from this job I 'm leaving , so they says oh we do n't want you to do that , best filer we 've had .
12 You had made me , but why had you not looked after me , and saved me from this pain and unhappiness ?
13 ‘ Maybe we could suspend them from this bit in the middle with a length of thread , ’ Norris grunted , sticking his head almost right inside the appliance .
14 The main reason for this lack of use appears have been uncertainty regarding the potential of such a source , a small number of companies indicated that cost was a factor deterring them from this type of information .
15 We pointed out them from this side of the house er the local government 's finance act does impose both duties .
16 For that reason I have excluded them from this chapter , which is concerned with men holding offices of profit under the Crown .
17 The Elves hid themselves in caves , woods and mountainsides and prayed to their gods that they would not be found , and that a hero would emerge to deliver them from this evil .
18 If a certificate of summary administration is in force , the official receiver need only investigate the bankrupt 's conduct and affairs if he thinks fit ( s 289(5) ) The official receiver must , at least once , send a report of the state of the bankrupt 's affairs to all creditors and file a copy at court ( r 6.73 ) although the court can release him from this obligation having regard to the funds available and the interests of creditors generally ( r 6.77 ) .
19 All she could see of him from this angle was that he was a very large man , broad as well as tall — so tall that he had to bend his head over his task .
20 He had n't admitted this for fear it would disqualify him from this part of the mission , and anyway he had thought he would feel safe behind the comforting protection of a pump-action .
21 I had considerable difficulty in dissuading him from this course and only did so when I was able to convince him that , far from assisting Aitken , it would damage his cause .
22 George V tried to dissuade him from this course and indeed went so far as to register a formal protest :
23 In ‘ Troilus and Criseyde ’ the narrator intrudes into his story ; he would like to shield Criseyde from her approaching adultery , but claims his role as ‘ translator ’ prevents him from this alteration of the text .
24 I thought at the time that her absent luncheon companion must have been a boorish character , and even the greatest friends of Randolph Churchill would find difficulty in defending him from this charge .
25 Beth was convinced that Matthew would run away if she took him from this house , then what would become of him ?
26 I know now what her power is strong enough to shatter a man 's mind and cast him from this world .
27 She reminded herself that it was not Paul 's fault ; and yet , somehow , he should have been able to shield her from this kind of outrage .
28 If only there were some way to release her from this bondage , turn her again into what she had been ; a young actress on her way to the top of the ladder , as Papa had often put it !
29 Something must be done to free her from this grip .
30 When his solicitor had phoned to make the appointment , refusing to say why his client wished to see her , she had secretly prayed that fate might intervene and mercifully save her from this meeting .
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