Example sentences of "[vb base] [verb] [to-vb] from [det] " in BNC.

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1 Oh , Ellen , I do want to escape from this prison .
2 The performances are certainly very competent , but this is n't quite the vintage Kantorov we 've come to expect from some of his later Denon recordings ; a degree of blandness gives the playing a slightly ‘ automatic ’ quality .
3 Proof-reading is of the abysmal quality we 've come to expect from this particular publisher , and there 's a certain amount of sloppiness and inaccuracy which a good editor would have pruned .
4 Is n't that what we 've come to expect from this worn out useless Government , that at the moment of decision making they run away ?
5 The 45 they 've decided to pluck from this last collection if ‘ Suck You Dry ’ , a glorious slab of grunge that opens with the innocent sound of a tambourine beating time and then explodes into a vampiric rocker that comes across like the successor ( at last ! ) to ‘ Touch Me , I 'm Sick ’ .
6 Step out of your apartments and you 're only 200 metres from some of the liveliest discos on the island , and the kind of exciting nightlife Club clients have come to expect from this ever-popular resort .
7 I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that exceedingly full and comprehensive reply — the type of reply that we have come to expect from this Minister .
8 Media publicity has brought the once secret martial arts very much to the forefront and styles have begun to emerge from many countries in southeast Asia .
9 If ‘ home ’ means , though , the defence of self and close kin for what Rainwater calls the ‘ lower class ’ , it means something quite different for those who have managed to escape from this class and who have achieved a degree of economic and emotional stability .
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