Example sentences of "[adv] [vb base] from a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm not what you 'd call the retiring type , and I rarely flinch from a fight when I 'm sure of my own righteousness ; but there is one thing I can not cope with , and that is unprovoked aggression .
2 A region dominated by branch assembly facilities and devoid of senior decision-makers , in contrast , is likely not only suffer from a sense of remoteness from those who control its destiny , but will also tend to lack social diversity and cultural vitality .
3 It has been proved that even a short stay helps not only the carers , but the patients , who greatly benefit from a change of scenery and the use of the many facilities we have here . ’
4 Haslemere had to endure some more scares , with ‘ keeper Paul Jones having to pull off one particularly good one-handed save from a header .
5 In third and fourth years , the degree programmes progressively diverge from a set of core modules common to all .
6 Never , ever breed from a mare that has given you any cause to fear her in the stable .
7 By fundamental barriers we mean those difficulties , which usually arise from a person 's personal circumstances such as lack of money or having to look after dependants .
8 Customers also benefit from a prompt , no-nonsense quotation service .
9 Clearly , the members of the Cabinet without departmental responsibilities are expected to help to resolve this problem , but they often suffer from a sense of being outsiders without the detailed departmental briefs possessed by their colleagues .
10 clay , other than pottery , which has been deliberately subjected to heat ( e.g. walls and bases of kilns and hearths , metal-production debris such as tuyeres and furnaces , core material remaining in bronzes after casting on a clay core ) , or heated accidentally ( e.g. daub from a house burnt down in a fire )
11 They have done this by asking what the British really want from a holiday .
12 For example , types of worker resistance which derive from spontaneous , unofficial initiatives on the part of groups of workers often benefit from a degree of tacit legitimacy , in the sense that those in authority may ‘ turn a blind eye ’ to various workshop practices .
13 Most analysts have now cut their first quarter forecast , and the views now range from a loss of 64 cents a share to a profit of eight cents — and David Wu of S G Warburg has gone out on a limb with forecast $0.80 a share loss .
14 The town centre property in Castlegate is owned by brewers Tetley who now operate from a depot on the outskirts of the town .
15 If — as appears to be the case — detected offenders typically start from a position of social disadvantage ( which means that the obligation to obey the law weighs more heavily upon them than on others ) then punishment will tend to increase inequality rather than do the opposite .
16 Working mothers today suffer from a problem which beset middle-class matrons at the turn of the century — you just ca n't get the staff .
17 A perceptive observer , a sensitive and powerful draughtsman , his works here accrue from a year 's study at Thornton Greyhound Racing Stadium , near Kirkcaldy .
18 Smoke damage from a fire is covered , whether the fire is in the Policyholder 's home or a neighbour 's house i.e. smoke from a fire in neighbour 's house causes smoke damage to Policyholder 's property .
19 Never profit from a confidence , but make profit in confidence
20 Most of this has until recently come from a grant from the CTC , but that has now been reduced to £300 .
21 Most of this has until recently come from a grant from the CTC , but that has now been reduced to £300 .
22 Most of this has until recently come from a grant from the CTC , but that has now been reduced to £300 .
23 ‘ I never work from a script , I just adlib the whole programme …
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