Example sentences of "[vb base] [verb] [adv] from [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Do you ever feel that life is getting on top of you or that you want to run away from the demands made on you by career or family ? |
2 | Now , are there any aspects about the isomerism you want clarifying apart from the whole lot ? |
3 | I want to turn now from the research library in its university information context to developments at national level relevant to the seminar discussion . |
4 | Most guests use a lounge for coffee , tea or for meeting friends ; but for those who simply want to relax away from the bedroomn , newspapers and magazines are an essential extra . |
5 | We want to break away from the way men behave , not imitate them . |
6 | I want to get away from the era of continual press conferences and announcements and long speeches . |
7 | I 'm quite keen to make a distinction between what you might call victimless crimes and crimes with victims , and that it is , it seems to me , we want to move away from an older pattern in which the university had its ideas of how people should behave and tried to make them conform to those ideas , towards a much more complaint activated system of response , so that it 's the kind of behaviour find objectionable that the authorities may get drawn into looking at . |
8 | no , if they 're , if they 're , if they 're not doing it , you know , the way The Body Shop did it , probably wo n't come to anything , mm , right , erm , are there any other matters arising , people want to bring up from the minutes ? no . |
9 | A midwinter day … the wind to the north , the sky in rags , hail whipping in from the islands in dark squalls . |
10 | Birds are prominent on the tundra , especially in summer when migrant waders and waterfowl pour in from the south ; only a few species are year-round residents . |
11 | After that he would fight clear of the envelope and hope to dive away from the pod . |
12 | The first — which will start in April next year , and run for three years — is a new system of transitional protection for those households that stand to lose most from the abolition of domestic rates . |
13 | They stand to benefit little from the insider dealing prohibition . |
14 | They are the teeth that stand to benefit most from the conservative approach advocated by Dr Anusavice and like-minded practitioners . |
15 | Sri Lanka 's existing network of community-based newspapers and periodicals stand to benefit substantially from the proposed new media legislation . |
16 | Even in a larger group , so long as a few actors stand to benefit disproportionately from the group 's success , then it may be worth their while to bear the costs of collective action , although less-involved people will free-ride . |
17 | I rather think the Liberals , who stand to benefit greatly from the SNP initiative , should have supported it . |
18 | Of course , it was all too immediate , though some of us kept diaries , ; now we select and interpret looking back from a different Personal life and a very different political time . ) |
19 | Some of these planes seem to recede away from the eye into shallow depth , but this sensation is always counteracted by a succeeding passage which will lead the eye forward again up on to the picture plane . |
20 | Yo , for your own information , as th , say health and safety group , in terms of people who ha , who undertake vision screening and then get referred on from a , for a full full eye tests it 's usually around |
21 | It is the custom , you understand , for the bride and groom to slip away from the wedding during the evening celebration , and hide somewhere — at a friend 's for example . ’ |
22 | ‘ We 've just been through a decade where we watched surface responsibility get peeled away from a lot of people and institutions . ’ |
23 | Returning to the advice that Leo Amery gave me as a young man , I remember reading widely from the great autobiographies and biographies that he recommended , including the works of Lord Milner . |
24 | Climbers like to break away from the usual uniform of breeches and warm top , favouring instead old tracksuit bottoms and rancid T-shirts , but the scrambler usually likes to be well turned out . |
25 | At the end of the day it is good to be able to think that as you step back to look at the work — especially if you remember to get down from the ladder first . |
26 | As Peter Medawar pointed out many years ago in his classic essay Is the scientific paper a fraud ? these essential elements in how research is done get refined out from the account as it appears in the finally published papers or scientific reviews , just as they have largely , though not entirely , been filtered from the discussion of Aplysia and LTP in the last chapter . |
27 | Females with very young kids also tend to keep away from the herd . |
28 | However , since personal and social difficulties are experienced by most people , the problems addressed in primary prevention in social work also include those complex processes whereby individuals become separated out from the general population , entering client careers with welfare agencies ( Greenley and Kirk , 1973 ; Hardiker and Barker , 1985 ) . |
29 | But all the explanation she gave me was , ‘ Now yow keep away from the lads an' never let 'em kiss yer or the next thing yer know yer 'll be 'avin' a baby . |
30 | Try jumping down from a low platform , landing with bent knees . |