Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] it from the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I just called to say I 'm happy and I mean it from the bottom of my heart , ’ said Stevie .
2 I got it from the telly .
3 I opposed it from the very beginning .
4 She liked the sizzling sound of the water as it hit the stones when someone threw it from the bucket .
5 " I fetched it from the boatyard office . "
6 I get it from the radio .
7 Turning now very briefly to the H One D the Greater York issue , clearly the comments I 've made about the calculations for York have a knock on effect for our position on Greater York , the Greater York figures as I understand it from the County Council are based on a one hundred percent migration assumption , if the technical difference between us er we are right then we believe clearly the Greater York figure should be increased by an appropriate amount , and the we 've suggested the increased cut should be seven hundred er relating to the city itself I ca n't calculate with any great accuracy what the figure for the surrounding parts of Greater York might be , but it would be we suspect only another one to two hundred more on top of that , therefore that underst explains the reason why the City Council suggests that the Greater York should be increased to the ten four figure from the nine seven .
8 To expect a genius — yes , my daughter is a genius , I knew it from the first — to endure the humdrum ways of marriage , bear children , become a housewife — it does not bear thinking of !
9 ‘ She 's a trouble-maker ; I knew it from the beginning , ’ she muttered .
10 It rang while Elizabeth was in the field and I picked it up and someone spoke to me , but I can not speak , so I tore it from the wall and then no one could speak to me . )
11 And of course we 've always had closed circuit television at the underground car park in Gloucester Green , and I had it from the words of another Conservative Councillor , Councillor Ann Spokes , that she always uses Gloucester Green car park because it is so safe and so secure .
12 I regard it from the point of view of the importance to our people , our country and Europe as a whole .
13 I take it from the nature of your answer that you would in any event agree that none of those other factors which you concern yourself with have any relevance as to whether or not the land performs a greenbelt function ?
14 I have it from the coroner himself .
15 well I have it I have it from the words of himself er
16 Because I see it from the outside ?
17 The top is quickly reached from the grassy nick which separates it from the nearby Roaches .
18 The label draws attention to three important developments which distinguish it from the early Romanov State .
19 A real state consists of a naive state and a sequence of naive operations which produces it from the naive start state .
20 Indeed , the divisions within the class are as striking as the features which separate it from the middle class .
21 The literary text may negotiate with its containment ( as Shakespeare 's do ) , but its contemporary subversive force has been compromised by the political dominance of state power which excludes it from the centre and places it on the margins of socially sanctioned institutions .
22 During the years between 1813 and 1830 Serbia , under Miloš , had experienced a social , cultural and economic transformation which brought it from the medieval obscurity of a declining oriental despotism to the threshold of modern European statehood .
23 Oh yes , oh yes , you got it from the chemist .
24 I think it was a mongrel she got it from the animal rescue
25 Just got this from a mate who got it from the Arsenal list ( ! ! ! )
26 There 's nothing worse than the straight man who shouts it from the rooftop . ’
27 The idea came in nineteen ninety two , the early part of nineteen ninety two er from Doctor Frank er who was er sitting on the Race Training Committee who approached it from the point of view we need to obviously broaden the triangle on the competitive side .
28 She filled it from the larder and the fridge .
29 Counter-insurgency and its attendant covert and intelligence aspects have had an inordinate degree of latitude and influence on policy in Ulster partly because the Westminster cabinet and parliament are incredibly ignorant of the region and have been well content if the English politicians and Whitehall civil servants who administer it from the Northern Ireland Office at Stormont Castle succeeded in preventing its problems from impinging on the affairs of the mainland .
30 Have you got it from the tables .
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