Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] [pers pn] from [art] " in BNC.

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1 The top is quickly reached from the grassy nick which separates it from the nearby Roaches .
2 A real state consists of a naive state and a sequence of naive operations which produces it from the naive start state .
3 Women lawyers are challenging the chauvinism which bans them from the higher echelons , reports Fiona Sutherland Omitted from the useful introductions to clients , business lunches , meetings and golfing sessions , women solicitors fail to acquire the vital ‘ client base . ’
4 Earth Dwellers have now begun to grasp that they are tattering the ozone layer , which protects them from the harmful rays of their sun ( star 4135 in our heavens ) .
5 The kind of reasoning that we have discussed , which takes us from a finite list of singular statements to the justification of a universal statement , which takes us from some to all , is called inductive reasoning and the process is called induction .
6 Astron , weighing 3½ tonnes , is in a highly elliptical orbit which takes it from a height of 2000 km up to 200 000 km , half way to the Moon .
7 The benefit of getting it there early and a little leap word which takes you from a feature to a benefit
8 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 .
9 But in 1992 , the only thrusting we can expect of a businessman is that which propels him from a very high building on to the recession-hit pavement below .
10 Nobody expects it from a well-dressed , well-spoken girl , especially in designer shops .
11 It makes sure that the family of the deceased director receive fair payment for his or her shares , which saves them from the problem of having to find an alternative buyer .
12 It may seem that if we succeed in adapting our values to such disturbances instead of losing them altogether , it is because we still retain some vestige of a Christian and liberal moral tradition a memory of ‘ Do unto others … ’ at the roots of social habit , which saves us from the collapse into competing egoisms into which deepening conflicts are perpetually driving us .
13 There 's nothing worse than the straight man who shouts it from the rooftop . ’
14 There , she is befriended by Stoney , a sexy rock ‘ n ’ roller who rescues her from a world of LSD that she has dropped into .
15 Then comes ‘ Success Has Made A Failure Of Our Home ’ and knocks you over ; she wrenches it from the grasp of Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette and makes it absolutely her own , Phil Ramone 's arrangement swelling dramatically to Sinead 's own end-piece , and with the last emphatic plea of ‘ Am I not your girl ? ’ both you and she fall down , emotionally exhausted .
16 The customer who takes them from the shelf therefore does not accept an offer .
17 Ben can do it because … well , he 's a man , and one expects it from a man .
18 By a somewhat artificial rule , a servant who receives a thing from his master for the master 's use is deemed not to be in possession of it , though the contrary is true where he receives it from a stranger for the master 's use .
19 It frees him from the awkward contortions of hand and wrist that make violin lessons and practice all too necessary .
20 It is sometimes suggested that the absence of note-taking can be a help to the informant , in that it frees him from the inhibiting effects of a recorder and a notebook .
21 Contrary to what Tony Lumpkin believes , speaking for all those who have been subjected to the drudgery of learning it in school , grammar is not a constraining imposition but a liberating force : it frees us from a dependency on context and the limitations of a purely lexical categorization of reality .
22 Erm tin does n't rust and it protects it from the air and water , you get 'em
23 Committees are a waste of time , so he deletes them from the diary .
24 How much does he buy it for , he got , he buys it from the market .
25 But that realisation should not be a disappointment : rather it liberates us from the job of creating masterpieces , and gives us a much more achievable task .
26 But the reader gains as well , because he sees it from a different angle .
27 But the reader gains as well because he sees it from a different angle .
28 Perhaps the most important point is that , regardless of who may be at the launch point , the pilot alone bears the responsibility for accepting or rejecting the launch in the light of the situation as he sees it from the cockpit .
29 At least it keeps them from the dangers which await them on the streets .
30 It takes us from the 19th century through to the 1930s and 1940s and the pioneering work of a number of embroiderers , in particular Constance Howard , who in 1951 was invited to make a large-scale work for the Festival of Britain .
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