Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] it from [art] " in BNC.

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1 If he respects and loves his original … he must liberate it from the boundaries of time , the boundaries of physical change of all sorts , the boundaries of cultural change . "
2 yeah I think , I do n't , she must lock it from the inside window back through
3 If you go by the side of the college you 'll see it from the
4 You get neroli from the blossom , er tangerine and orange which erm or mandarin , whi people might call it from the fruits , and from the leaves and the twigs and the bark you get er an oil called petitgrain .
5 And then we 'll print it from the C drive with WordPerfect loaded from the C drive .
6 Well you 'll get it , you 'll get it from the turnover wo n't you ?
7 ‘ I 'll sing you a song , mates , ’ yelled back Bobby hoarsely , ‘ I 'll sing it from the roof-tops when we see an end not only of this strike but of every useless , time-wasting ; pointless strike we 've ever seen in this country in the last half-dozen years .
8 If , after filtering the clones , a probe having more than 2 ( N — 1 ) neighbours is found , it is reported as a ‘ suspect ’ one and the user may remove it from the analysis and repeat the procedure .
9 You could smell it from the far side of the room through its Father Christmas wrapping paper .
10 It would clearly be very difficult to compare one disaster to another , in fact I 'm not even sure you could do it from a grammatical point of view , but if you were to point your finger somewhere in the world and say , ‘ We really ought to look at what 's happening here , or what might happen there , ’ could you think of one outstanding example ?
11 So I spent two years in the mother and baby home , then , and decided that if I was going to stay in social work , then I would erm be better a able to help people if I could do it from the theoretical background as well as the feeling erm background er of my own my own personal feelings .
12 Maybe , maybe maybe I could do it from the theatre , would , would help
13 Their snug cottage looked across the road to the ugliest house on the green , the Rectory , which stood at six o'clock , dead opposite the Youngs across Thrush Green , and was consequently a source of continuous irritation to Edward , the architect , who could see it from every south-facing window of his house .
14 ‘ No , you did n't have to , you little bitch ; I could see it from the minute we arrived !
15 You could keep it from the women , the hidden story of the cells and the cemeteries , of the club and the castor oil bottle .
16 So if you know the graph of Y equals X squared which unfortunately I ca n't draw tonight it 's draw it for you , could draw it from the inside keep telling everyone else .
17 ‘ We 'd approach it from the south instead of the east , that would be all .
18 I was n't listening , but I could hear it from the dining room .
19 I could read it from the Oxford
20 When we were flush again and we could afford something , you 'd get it from a catalogue or whatever .
21 The north-east was no place to refine one 's art , but the money was good ( if you could prise it from the agent ) and it widened my working circle ( if you survived . )
22 And one more coming up , let's take it from the bottom of the pile , literally , and it turns out to be Mrs Diane , Street , Market Harborough .
23 Let's take it from the point where you have essentially broke the door down .
24 In fact we may take it from the wording of Section 2 of the Definition Order that , during the conference questions were asked about the liability of individuals to repatriation , or Section 2 might not have been included at all .
25 Let's try it from a different perspective , ’ she said , and pressed again .
26 But this was because it was one-sided , they used to lock it from the outside and there was a catch on the inside as they could put in .
27 Well that was what they call it , tortoise stove , used to be a big stove and that ai n't got no grate in they had er they used to feed it from the top ,
28 We used to rent it from the Kipling family before Daddy bought it , but even my great-grandfather William Bayles farmed at Low Birk Hatt .
29 But what would transform it from an externally enforced to a moral obligation ?
30 One suspects that the writers were not altogether clear in their own minds ; the monk of Croyland , for all his extravagant remarks about the northerners , also spoke in terms of the ‘ sovereignty of England ’ , when describing a prophecy among the Welsh , whom he certainly regarded as different , that they would recover it from the English , although they failed to do so in 1469 ( 14 , p.543 ) .
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