Example sentences of "[noun sg] set [adv prt] from [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Inset : The River Bus , MV Conrad Chelsea Harbour sets off from Lambeth Pier with its royal passenger on board . |
2 | Selected 24-piece cutlery sets down from £120 to £79 . |
3 | The 106 entrants in the gruelling marathon set off from London on a route which took them through Europe to Turkey in classic cars ranging from a Ford Cortina to a Russian Moskvitch , all at least 25 years old . |
4 | North East Club for pre-war Austins Mad March Hare run sets off from Scotch 11am . |
5 | With Mesic openly urging JNA soldiers and officers to desert , a large JNA armoured column set out from Belgrade on Sept. 19 . |
6 | The Burleigh group set off from London on Friday morning and they 're hoping their efforts have raised up to a million pounds for the 2 hospitals . |
7 | The carnival parade sets off from Nun 's Close car park at 10am on Monday and winds its way through the town . |
8 | if we suppose a traveller to set out from Venice on March 1 , 1245 , the first day of the Venetian year , he would find himself in 1244 when he reached Florence ; and if after a short stay he went on to Pisa , the year 1246 would already have begun there . |
9 | The village cat owner sets off from home and finds the pet cat tagging along . |
10 | Further , we were almost certainly the first publishing operation set up from scratch to capitalise on the new technology . |
11 | The entire unit set out from Kabrit at night , carrying weights to simulate the bombs which we would have to cart along with us on a real raid . |
12 | With Churchill 's prodding , the British Chiefs-of-Staff had agreed to participate in the operation , albeit in modified form , and on 31 August an Anglo-Free French expedition set out from Liverpool . |
13 | In the mood of schoolboys off on an expedition to plant stinkbombs on speechday , the party set off from Westminster Pier , shadowed by two police launches . |