Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] from [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Joseph rode slowly from the southern end of the camp , with five warriors walking beside him and leaning against his horse 's flanks . |
2 | There is Israeli ‘ absentee ’ legislation and there are land expropriation laws passed on from the British mandate . |
3 | Thick golden bars of sunlight slanted down from the tall narrow windows . |
4 | It differs greatly from the family-based structuring of human life with its stress on the long-term bond between mates . |
5 | Could you repeat the bit about the insect-headed aliens gazing down from the spinning globules of light ? |
6 | After all , the 26 tracks on the album have been whittled down from a huge figure . |
7 | French military reinforcements , 150 troops , had been flown in from the Central African Republic to evacuate foreign nationals in Kigali . |
8 | Even quite senior figures in the system just went through the motions of working and fulfilling the crazy plan laid down from a great height without taking local conditions into account . |
9 | Britain can glean much from the Australian experience . |
10 | His pursuit of the same approach in his cantatas arose perhaps from a firm conviction of what would succeed in a genre so closely allied to opera , perhaps from innate conservatism . |
11 | This formula differs somewhat from the classical Hertz expression for elastic deformation of a plane by a rigid sphere . |
12 | Cop the name of the man ( above ) who is stepping down from a top job . |
13 | The capes are famous for a confused and ugly swell , and peculiar lumps of wind that crash down from the coastal peaks of the Taurus Mountains . |
14 | Tumours developed only from the CC-M2T cell line within six weeks . |
15 | They were awarded damages for this loss of ordinary business which arose naturally from the late delivery . |
16 | But it , as I have suggested , the structures of identity formation at work here are fundamental to our existing cultural forms , they can not be considered as stemming only from the psychoanalytic tradition . |
17 | The anthropologist 's social structure must be pieced together from a muddling mass of statements that Indians make about kinship connections , group names , ancestral derivations , linguistic affiliations , geographical sites , and so on … |
18 | Edmund 's Welsh alliance has to be pieced together from a twelfth-century poet , a contemporary German bishop , and two skaldic poems . |
19 | When invited to lecture at Cheltenham Art Gallery he merely read aloud from a printed copy of his talk , Speculations on the Contemporary Painter . |
20 | ‘ 'The social principles of Christianity preach cowardice , self-contempt , abasement , submissiveness , meekness — ’ she read aloud from the early works of Marx , which she had never returned to the library , property being theft , and knowledge free for everyone . |
21 | There was a second figure , which they did n't see : high above them , Timothy Gedge gazed down from the cliff-top path . |
22 | When this happens it is time to celebrate and consider all the various offers raining in from the major labels . |
23 | Singing constantly from a prominent post or in flight , they show off their beautiful spring black , white , grey and buff spring plumage in the hope it will prove irresistible to the first passing female . |
24 | Correlations in this area , especially in non-Marxist work but still in most Marxist work hitherto , have tended to proceed less from the steady analysis of evidence than from relatively a priori concepts , usually of a strictly contemporary kind , to which such evidence as there is is illustratively added . |
25 | The only place where this type of sedimentation seems to be going on at the present day is in the ocean depths , where the deposits consist mainly of the remains of minute pelagic organisms , literally raining down from a watery heaven , plus volcanic dust raining down more intermittently from the aerial heaven above . |
26 | He had indeed caught on from the bad vibes the driver had been giving out — the nervousness , the pale sweat-beaded face , the rapid eye movement towards the back seat — that something was bothering the guy . |
27 | There followed a rather more conventional period where his activities seem to have differed little from the other young gentlemen of his day ; he studied scientific works on medicine and the natural sciences and pursued a particular interest in taking thermometer readings under varying conditions , including some from the craters of Italian volcanoes . |
28 | France had been the major supporter of Euratom ; as the only one of the Six already possessing a nuclear programme , it obviously hoped to benefit most from the joint funding of the Community and to establish a domination of the nascent industry . |
29 | They are the teeth that stand to benefit most from the conservative approach advocated by Dr Anusavice and like-minded practitioners . |
30 | He started painting professionally from an early age , and was soon contributing regularly to publications such as Punch , Illustrated London News and the Graphic newspaper . |