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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I write all right from night to night ,
2 All-rounder Lewis reached his 112-ball century with a spectacular six off Venkat Raju , swung high over long on from yards down the pitch .
3 So , ironically , while we prayed that rain would not blight our sale , we worked to help those who suffer so terribly from lack of rain .
4 ’ It is far enough away from London for nobody to know anything , and the Heathertons will give you some standing .
5 Covered all over from head to toe ,
6 Not all fathers or mothers were converted so easily from tyranny to benevolence , but , by the 1740s , a new attitude to children was spreading steadily among the middle and upper classes .
7 He bewildered her with his easy lovemaking , with the sensations that he called up so easily from way inside her .
8 Although some differences appear to stem more or less directly from inequalities in wealth and power , others appear to be associated with attitudes and values which can not be related directly to such inequalities ; an example is the preference of British working-class mothers for bottle-feeding rather than breast-feeding their babies .
9 CWS profits rose only marginally from £47.7m to £48.5m .
10 A phenomenon resulting only partly from use of the above technique is that figures can best be compared when arranged in columns since the eye can then relatively easily ignore unvarying digits and the brain can perform subtractions or divisions more readily .
11 Eros is , after all , not so far from Agape in the pantheon of the heart .
12 Opposing the application , Anna Blower , for the boy , said he would be very upset if placed so far from home in a strange environment .
13 Not the specific details , because domestic life is changing so radically from decade to decade : its structure is also strongly influenced by patterns of child care and external work .
14 If I am particularly hard on Chailly here it is because Schoenberg suffers so often from performances of this kind , and he so needs interpreters who understand the spirit behind the notes .
15 This mechanism — what we called the cash balance transmission mechanism in Chapter 3 — is direct , in contrast with the Keynes effect where the stimulus to expenditure arises only indirectly from reductions in the interest rate .
16 Well those people were only there from Tuesday to Friday .
17 The agreement for their sale to Cohens was dated 12 October 1935 , and must have been signed while it was still hoped that the line would open right through from Sutton to the Crystal Palace in one operation .
18 You 've chosen when you want to go , and that was n't difficult because you know that San Antonio is electric right through from April to October .
19 Important projects include the development of advanced mechanical ventilation and heat recovery systems , right through from conception to full commercialisation .
20 while four-fifths of the students were studying on IT Advanced Courses that finished in September , 1984 , the survey did include those whose courses finished right through from June to October ;
21 So she has tipped the system a little away from collective to presidential government ’ .
22 In practice it is difficult to accurately measure such a small drop , and weight does fluctuate a little anyway from day to day .
23 Assuming a starting point on the north shore , drive to Gersau ( one of the resorts sheltered by the Rigi ) from where a vehicular ferry operates across the lake to Beckenried approximately hourly from April to mid-October .
24 And it must have stirred memories for his father , Colin , sitting just along from Venables in the Maine Road .
25 The museum covers canals , mining , and chain-making , among other industries , and is open daily from March to December ( except Christmas ) .
26 The farm is open daily from April to December .
27 It is cheating a bit , I fear , to think of the Basque Coast as Pyrenean , because at this end of the chain , unlike at the other , the mountains fight shy of the water and make a decisive turn to the west some miles inland , to enter Spain ; so you can see the most northerly or westerly Pyrenees easily enough from points along the coast , but you ca n't feel you are among them .
28 Steventon is on the main line , exactly halfway from London to Bristol .
29 We were on a beach just up from Frinton at the time , and when Oliver heard Gill 's remark he went into one of his spiels .
30 He also quoted a colleague just back from service in Italy who ‘ says do n't on any account , ’
  Next page