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

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1 Better still , bring along a coach from your parish .
2 Turn the rectangle upside down and carve out a hollow from the centre , leaving a frame of at least 1cm ( ½inch ) and a depth of about half the cake .
3 All the hives were up on the moor , and there was little to do except check that no fieldmice were getting into them , sniff them to detect foul brood , listen for late swarms , and cut out a comb from any that weighed too full .
4 erm and of course , er , normal years they also earn quite a lot from exporting their cat
5 Every Sunday , the huge congregation , gathered in the Ulster Hall , heard either Mrs Paisley or one of the ministers read out a message from their leader in prison .
6 So , pack your cycle clips and either pick up a brochure from your local travel agent or call us on freephone .
7 We drive to Swords and pick up a key from Crilly 's sister , Lorraine , who occupies a small semi-detached house with her husband and her two children .
8 To help , just contact Sight Savers at 21 The Strand , Bromsgrove , Worcestershire B61 8AB ( tel : 0527 579226 ) or pick up a leaflet from Sound Control at 61 Jamaica Street , Glasgow G1 4NN for a sponsorship form , and then go along to either the Birmingham Town Hall on Sunday September the 20th between 2.00pm and 4.00pm , or our Scottish Music Show at the SECC in Glasgow at the same time .
9 For competition leaflets please contact ‘ Streetwise ’ , or pick up a leaflet from your local Woolwich branch .
10 Projects allowed some room for genuine experimentation and discovery , although the projects themselves are decided by the department , who draw up a list from which students can choose .
11 From a free-kick for foot-up at the scrum , Sonians set up a ruck from where Scott Hastings , at stand-off , chipped through .
12 Secondly , pick out a memory from your past , perhaps from your childhood , which makes your Dream seem a logical progression from what has been .
13 beneath the details of everyday life which Shamin describes is a feudal economy where small farmers scratch out a living from day to day , where one false step can mean falling into debt or mortgaging one 's land without hope of recovery and where one rebellious individual can place the entire economic unit , the joint family , at risk .
14 So the believing in religion with , with moral codes , particularly in those religions which have rather strict moral codes , and demand quite a lot from the believer , in terms of adherence to the er , to the moral law even those religions can be explained in terms of Freud 's transference theory , because that too , comes from childhood .
15 HIT THE NORTH sees Mark Radcliffe take on a session from No Man who are some of Japan .
16 Would ex-health minister Kenneth Clarke take up a freebie from ‘ Tummies & Tone-Ups ’ ?
17 So concentrate and then sort of pull back a bit from it and check the main bits and a good way is going through the sounds of each syllable .
18 Then he saw one of the men pull out a machete from his deep-lined overcoat pocket .
19 ‘ I need only a letter from you to your bank manager instructing him of your wishes .
20 The theories in this section represent only a selection from the range of sociological theories .
21 The children beat off a challenge from nine other Darlington schools .
22 The decision was made as the Labour leader , John Smith , resoundingly beat off a challenge from his own Euro-rebels bent on destroying the treaty .
23 I have here a guarantee from Adolf Hitler of peace in our time …
24 ‘ I have here a letter from the chief magician , Mr Hellibore , who presides over the Hallowe'en festivities each year .
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