Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] [pers pn] from the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You said they were n't acknowledged ; what 's wrong with them from the Edwin Garlands ’ point of view ? ’
2 They all descended from a structure that was suspended high above them from the centre of the dome .
3 When I postulated that the environmentalists might have a case , they were horrified that I of all people should express such a view , when it had been clear to them from the start that I was different from the others ( my sisters ) .
4 Calling them " temporary workers " merely made their situation clear to them from the start of their employment .
5 It would be heartless to deny her the pleasure of feeling that she is making a useful contribution to the preparation of meals , but it would be equally unkind not to make it clear to her from the beginning just who will be in charge and wearing the chef 's hat !
6 ‘ But Ken was making it very clear to me from the very beginning that I was not going to get away with anything , ’ Pertwee told me .
7 It was clear to us from the beginning that 1991 would not be a very good year to launch anything — from magazines to Scuds .
8 It should have been made quite clear to you from the beginning that MI5 's word on this would be final . ’
9 then erm the first payment in some occasions is a cheque direct to you from the TEC .
10 It was provided with a direct link to the London and North-Western 's Camden Station and so animals were driven direct to it from the trains .
11 But manufacturers can sometimes move the goal posts to suit their own ends — or perhaps they were oblivious to them from the start .
12 Warhol was utterly and completely worthless for me from the word go , something in the history of fashion perhaps but nothing to do with art whatsoever .
13 No , there 's no problem , I 'm just like , saying that , they sound really thick , they 're rubbish at being in a band , and it 's just all so down-hill for them from the beginning , really , they did n't really have a chance , did they .
14 It was obvious to her from the beginning that there was too much overlap .
15 ( Stimulus A of fig. 5.10 might be said to be enriched , if only a little , by virtue of its ability to evoke the image of X. ) The differentiation theory , in contrast , holds that ‘ percepts change over time by progressive elaboration of qualities , features and dimensions of variation ’ ( Gibson and Gibson 1955 , p. 34 ) , that is , by an elaboration of aspects of the stimulus that are present in it from the outset .
16 That 's right , just looking at the er the tables that I 've managed to get faxed to me from the Football League today .
17 Of his death , the only reference found is the entry in Maskelyne 's account book for 13 March 1784 : ‘ Recd of Mrs Grace Sisson , thro ’ the hands of Mr Henry Robin Auctioneer my dividend for £88.14.11 due to me from the Estate of the late Jerh Sisson — £15.0.0 — and gave it to the Widow . ’
18 Is my right hon. Friend aware that some British companies have not received the compensation due to them from the Turkish authorities controlling northern Cyprus ?
19 Indeed , some estimates have suggested that if the Exchequer received all the tax due to it from the black economy , the basic rate of income tax might be cut by 10 per cent .
20 Then , taking into account the resources of the authority , and the revenue available to it from the National Non-domestic Rate , the government is to decide how much Revenue Support Grant it will give , and how much revenue it considers should be raised by the authority itself through Community Charge .
21 Slingsby first visited Norway in 1872 and soon discovered that he was in a country with whose inhabitants he had almost everything in common ; where the language was familiar to him from the vocabulary surviving in the Yorkshire dales , and where the temperament and customs were akin to his own .
22 The early history was familiar to her from the memoir of the founder which stood in limp green leather covers on Gilbert Racy 's shelves at Betterhouse .
23 This point should be familiar to you from the discussion of long-wave , world-system and regulationist theories in Chapters 1 and 2 .
24 But the world of chapter 26 is not only familiar to us from the preceding chapters of Genesis .
25 The old cry , familiar to us from the Exodus stories , now goes up again .
26 ‘ Did n't you guess , my beautiful idiot , that I 've been crazy about you from the first time I saw you standing outside your hotel bedroom in France ? ’
27 Towards the end of April , Alexander 's Eighth Army was approaching this area from the west , while Tito 's Yugoslav troops were already advancing into it from the south , in pursuit of the disintegrating German 97th Army Corps .
28 Lakatos assumed that any field of enquiry that does not share the main characteristics of physics is not science and is inferior to it from the point of view of rationality .
29 ‘ Something about this entire operation never rang true for me from the start .
30 At all stages in the development of armory , and in all the centuries during which it has been in use , there have been two conflicting underlying factors , and it is important that the local historian be aware of them from the outset , so that if false trails are followed they are not followed for long .
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