Example sentences of "[verb] from [det] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 All recordings are genuine , manufactured and supplied by the world 's leading record companies — and are identical to those you could buy from any leading store .
2 ‘ But the head and the Hand of Glory come from that poor hag .
3 Ahmed had come from that dizzy town to boast that he had seen a bad strange girl leaving Marie Claire 's house and had shouted and thrown stones at her .
4 And now , very recently indeed , confirmation has come from that remarkable treasury of early fossils , the Burgess Shalesin the Canadian Rockies .
5 If promised reforms of US healthcare live halfway up to some of the lurid stories being bandied around on Wall Street , then the new administration on Pennsylvania Avenue will have missed a trick : almost every job created since the recession began in 1990 has come from this vibrant industry .
6 How could all those wonderful , light , fairy designs have come from this dreary-looking lady ?
7 Even the family car had come from some Church-loan scheme .
8 The council 's pollution control officer , Jim Dickson , said he had heard no reports of oil pollution in that area and suggested the oil may have come from some other source .
9 I do n't really know why I always went unless it was to remind myself that I too had once come from some other world than the one in which I lived .
10 They 're standard army ammunition , but not necessarily issued to the British Army — again , the Ministry of Defence should be able to tell you if they 've come from some British Army depot or not .
11 An enterprising firm of potters anywhere in the Province could supply batches of their wares , so crates of vessels arriving at the quartermasters ' stores could have come from any available source .
12 If they had come from any other man or woman in the kingdom of Scotland , they would have been considered treasonable ; writing to her brother Henry , Margaret made constant pleas for the English to send troops into Scotland to restore her as Regent and crush any opposition to her and the Earl of Angus .
13 Though the news of her ‘ engagement ’ could not possibly have come from any other source than he of the ‘ My office — now ’ order .
14 It 's the worst thing that 's ever come from any political Party and all associated problems live on , and all we have at the moment is one statement after the other from the Ministers which blame the very people that it attacks .
15 Whilst the partnership agreement may well expressly or by implication prohibit a partner from becoming involved in other ( non-competing ) business in an attempt to secure his full time devotion to the firm , breach of such provision will not result in the offending partner becoming accountable in respect of profits earned from that other business .
16 It embarrassed him still more when she arrived dressed for bed herself as well , a complex bundle of diaphanous nightwear from the midst of which her poised cigarette arm stuck out oddly , like an awkward projection emrging from some ill-wrapped Christmas parcel .
17 What Mr Byrne 's unpleasant and excitable letter omitted , and what has been omitted from all subsequent debate , is that Mr Smith is unanswerably the only serious contender offering himself for the leadership .
18 Client will ensure that all information relating to itself comprised in announcements , public statements , the Offer document and any other documents during KPMG 's engagement hereunder issued by or with the consent or knowledge of Client will be true and accurate in all material respects and will not be misleading , and that all expressions of opinion , intention and expectation therein will be honestly held and will be made only after due consideration and that there will not be omitted from any such document any fact the omission of which would make any statement therein false or misleading ;
19 Since wars involve others than those who face battle , that overwhelming majority who may prefer to have nothing at all to do with war , they can not , and should not , be omitted from any modern consideration of the subject .
20 Sooner or later , if she ever got her reason back , she would realise that her daughter had resigned from this German job six weeks before the accident , that she had n't breathed a word to her aunt or her friends about the possibility of her returning to Europe .
21 Lear was always to suffer from this apparent rejection .
22 Sikh ones have learned to live with the reality of this on their own terms , while Gujerati Hindu male egos appear in general not to suffer from this particular weakness at all .
23 Does the breeder replace the pup free-of-charge if it is found to suffer from any hereditary fault ? 5 .
24 However , to establish from this that taste is objective he needs an extra premise : that higher art compels greater attention and provides greater enjoyment to the observer than low art .
25 One business that would certainly hope to benefit from any extensive re-equipping of the forces is Royal Ordnance , the subsidiary of British Aerospace that bought the MOD 's factories .
26 However , the borrower does incur the disadvantage of being unable to benefit from any subsequent decline in market interest rates over the loan 's term .
27 Now SaverPlus 2001 allows you to benefit from this profitable record from as little as £10 per month .
28 Our strategy is straightforward : we will continue to concentrate on our two core businesses of spirits and beers and to benefit from this clear focus .
29 His opportunism , his cheating , even his charm , all stemmed from that one flaw of nature ; weakness of character .
30 One of the classic confrontations of nineteenth-century ethnology stemmed from this very circumstance .
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