Example sentences of "[adv] [to-vb] from [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Well more misery for Forest another defeat more injuries less to go from strength to strength and we 'll be right back .
2 In theory , the scheme is meant to help pupils who would otherwise be unable to do so to benefit from education at an independent school , but Janet Finch argues that past experience of the direct grant system ‘ would lead one to suppose that many beneficiaries of such a scheme will be middle-class children ’ .24 In 1986–7 about 24,500 pupils attended independent schools under the Assisted Places Scheme in England alone , and this transferred £43 million of taxpayers ' money to independent schools .
3 It seemed far too insignificant to be holding back a lake large enough to stretch from London to the Scottish borders .
4 Quill-written characters consist of a series of more-or-less straight strokes , simple enough for a computer to turn into numbers and analyse , but complex enough to vary from scribe to scribe .
5 ‘ We surprise clients by recommending them not to proceed from time to time , ’ he says .
6 No it took me fifteen minutes tonight to get from school to Kyle 's Kyle 's school !
7 His eyes were grey-green , like Finn 's , but had warm brown flecks in them and looked straight and candid ahead , as though they saw too directly to look from side to side .
8 And the person who had sorted it together at Birmingham made sure that the next stop it was at , the waggons would be at the back end to leave in that town and this is what my father was doing by er er shunting as it was called , or making a train up to go from Nottingham to London , or some other place in the country , with up to fifty or sixty trucks behind it and they did n't want the trucks next to the engine to be dropped off at the first place and having to shove and push about in their marshalling yard .
9 Where risk has increased there is an increasing need for capital to provide a buffer against loss … the removal of the old protective barriers led to a rush by the smaller players to merge with new , bigger partners both to benefit from economies of scale and scope and to augment their capital base sufficiently to meet the requirements of the new , more demanding market context …
10 Groups of different markets ( as well as different firms in the same market ) are sufficiently interrelated also to benefit from location in London ( for example futures markets to cover eurobond exposure , or the different currency sectors of the eurobond market ) .
11 Emilio Segre was one kid , and Bruno Pontecorvo , later to defect from Britain to the Soviet Union , another .
12 you know , this woman that I , goes down the school that talks , who I talked to , she knew from Peterborough and I think she 's German , she 's got an accent , I 'm sure for certain she 's German , anyway she 's got twins in Robert 's class and she was talking to me today and she was telling me her husband moved out to move from Peterborough with his job so I said what does he do ? and she said he 's a scientist , so I said oh is he ? ,
13 They used to let him up here to practise from time to time . ’
14 Just about to depart from Gibraltar for the island .
15 The band were about to fly from Ibiza to the bash in their Nottingham home-town , when the fans spotted them .
16 The combined effect of these concessions was virtually to remove from threat of rate-capping all but about 20 ( 4.4 per cent ) of the 456 principal local authorities then existing in England and Wales .
17 Bullen and Rockhart also show how the critical-success-factor approach can be applied equally at either the strategic or the operational activity level , and offer advice on how to ascertain from managers in fairly short interviews what these factors are .
18 Suppose we use it to decide how to travel from home to somewhere .
19 He pointed to ‘ Pergoles ’ and she lifted her head again to look from side to side .
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