Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] it from [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I made it from a pattern
2 I got it from a guy called Reuben , he was living in Wales and my sister Louise bought me a Joe Johnson with Rip trucks from him for £60 .
3 I got it from a novel I read at school , ’ she said , looking down and shuffling her feet .
4 ‘ No , I got it from an art shop . ’
5 I got it from the telly .
6 I opposed it from the very beginning .
7 He recognized that this was contrary to the opinion of the pope and others at the papal court , but he put it forward as his own : ‘ others certainly may have thought of it , but I received it from no one ’ .
8 She liked the sizzling sound of the water as it hit the stones when someone threw it from the bucket .
9 " I fetched it from the boatyard office . "
10 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 !
11 ‘ She 's a trouble-maker ; I knew it from the beginning , ’ she muttered .
12 I took it from a restaurant this morning .
13 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 . )
14 Obvious efforts are being made here to reduce the damage , which was much worse than I remembered it from a previous visit .
15 I learned it from a — sort of friend of mine a couple of hours ago .
16 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 .
17 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 .
18 Oh yes , oh yes , you got it from the chemist .
19 You know she 's , I think she got it from a very good chef she said somewhere .
20 I think it was a mongrel she got it from the animal rescue
21 Just got this from a mate who got it from the Arsenal list ( ! ! ! )
22 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 .
23 She filled it from the larder and the fridge .
24 She took it from the cupboard and as usual became engrossed in the other pages of the newspaper .
25 When she took it from the oven she was pleased with it , but later , placing it on the trestle table in the hall where refreshments were to be served , she saw that Sister Dew 's was higher .
26 An old cathedral had a scale when you saw it from the mountain , or the plain , the silhouette .
27 The guy who brought it from the garage would remember very well .
28 She said it as if it was a joke , but Alan knew perfectly well that she meant it from the bottom of her heart .
29 It was last exhibited in 1945 at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam and was sold to its present owner , private French collector Jacques Walter , in 1954 by Wildenstein of New York who bought it from the collection of Mrs Alice Kurtz .
30 She had it from the police , ’ he added defensively .
  Next page