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

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1 Wildflower walk in the North York Moors , 2pm from the Moors Centre , Danby , Whitby .
2 [ These appointments were omitted inadvertently from the roundups of republican appointments on p. 37384 and p. 37460 . ]
3 After studying the listings he decided that all the criteria had been met and witnessed a demonstration of the package build and test , entirely from the sources of the modules within LIFESPAN .
4 Not only that , it 's a full-fledged endangered species ( see ‘ Pigs in distress ’ ) , having disappeared entirely from the islands of Masbate , Bohol , Cebu , Guimaras and Sequijor , and holding on by the skin of its tusks only on Negros and Panay .
5 If we are alert to textual detail — and all studies of the reverberations of imagery in the Miller 's Tale tell us that it is a tale that encourages us to be so ( see below ) — then we can also find a suggestive parallel between Absolon 's inability to detach himself entirely from the vulgarities of the human world and the Host 's failure to impose an elegantly hierarchical structure on the tale-telling competition .
6 A dark rider had emerged suddenly from the woods .
7 A month later , Churchill told the Commons that the role of the ‘ overlords ’ had developed naturally from the functions of Cabinet-committee chairmen in the Second World War and that ‘ the co-ordinating Ministers have no statutory powers .
8 So in 1950 the American , Hillary Waugh , impressed by a volume of real murder cases he had picked up , not so much because of the horrific details the author had dwelt on as by the tone of authenticity that seemed to arise naturally from the accounts of the cases , decided to write a fictional crime story catching as much as he could of this real-life feel .
9 However , it follows on very naturally from the issues raised in chapter 3 , and some may want to read it directly after that .
10 Apparently from the notes , a certain Fruchtbaum in the Times Literary Supplement has described Charles on setting out on the Beagle voyage in such terms , which is certainly an exaggeration , but I do not know anyone else who has ever subscribed to that opinion .
11 Erm , we 're doing all about this in er E D S the other day and apparently from the pictures on the T V at the time everyone thought it was whole of Ethiopia that was starving , and it was only actually twenty five percent of the population .
12 Of course , these single-employer estates are not closed social fields : indeed , social networks extend outwards from the estates to include other colleagues employed by the same company who live elsewhere in Dunrossness , and perhaps also include a few Shetlanders perceived as having an equal social status .
13 Many nomads have settled in villages , bringing with them their ancestral compositions and weaving techniques , and few villages have escaped the broader cultural and rug-making influences spreading outwards from the towns .
14 Place your question in the centre of the model and work outwards from the parts to the further questions .
15 Notwithstanding such efforts , the smell of death was seldom absent for long from the dwellings of the poorest people .
16 Right , the reason that er an officer would still stay er with an eleven year old child , a three year old child , or t to get to the realms of fantasy a ninety year old person is that person can still be at risk not necessarily from the police officers , but from anybody else in that building and therefore they 've got to remain er in that room until such time as I 'm satisfied that everything is clear .
17 Whenever it was Charlie 's turn to spend four days in the advance trenches his section seemed to occupy most of their time filling their billycans with pints of water , as they struggled to bail out the gallons that dropped daily from the heavens .
18 With cars , tractors and lorries , farmers can travel daily from the lowlands to the hills .
19 Many others now are commuting daily from the valleys to new industries nearer the coast .
20 The main bridge between the two was the Council of 500 members , appointed annually from the demes in proportion to their population — so for instance Eleusis was allowed to send eleven councillors to the city , and the great deme of Acharnai sent twenty-two , while some tiny demes like Pambotadai and Syhridai took it in turn to send a single councillor , each sending one every other year .
21 Perhaps he was more specific , speaking of what he usually saw when he came to work in the morning — Eva in her blue silk pyjamas and red robe shouting and laughing and giving orders to me for breakfast , and reading aloud from the papers .
22 He had actually dozed off , perhaps from the fumes of the exhaust , when dive-bombers screamed above and bombs began to fall .
23 Well , children can be allowed to express their anxieties verbally and to learn perhaps from the adults ' modelling around them that to talk about these things in moderation is perfectly acceptable erm but not to do it to the extent or to allow children to perhaps watch the news coverage to the extent that they become over excited and are not able to contain their own feelings of anxiety about loss and damage and death and separation from parents and significant adults .
24 We do not know in detail whence the monks were recruited ; but on the whole they seem mainly to have come from the upper classes , and perhaps from the families of substantial town-dwellers .
25 It is a convention in Elizabethan drama that slander is always believed , which can be explained perhaps from the necessities of the limited time available , or is perhaps a truth about life ( how many of us instantly disbelieve bad report ? ) .
26 The government thus gained a new foothold on power relatively painlessly , apart perhaps from the consultations between Denis Healey and the Liberals ' economic spokesman , John Pardoe , two combustible personalities whose stormy meetings ( or shouting matches ) provided amusement and entertainment throughout Whitehall .
27 At the end of the Civil War roughly one-quarter of a million roved around the Ukraine , a region that had suffered greatly from the hostilities .
28 Etam sales , up 32 per cent to £84.3m on an increase in trading space of 29 per cent , appeared to benefit from the hot summer weather and its low-priced fashion for younger women seemed not to suffer greatly from the effects of higher mortgages .
29 All in all the Quiz Quest turned out to be a really good day out and , provided you all send in your sponsorship money , Amnesty will benefit greatly from the proceeds .
30 This version has benefited greatly from the comments of Margot Jefferys .
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