Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv] from the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If he 'd been able to keep from gloating , she 'd have ended up in his bed , which was what he 'd intended right from the beginning .
2 A month later , Churchill told the Commons that the role of the ‘ overlords ’ had developed naturally from the functions of Cabinet-committee chairmen in the Second World War and that ‘ the co-ordinating Ministers have no statutory powers .
3 Topics are likely to be examined only from the viewpoints held within the individual disciplines .
4 She had heard enough from the Julians to recognise in the disrepair something of the troubles of the Dersinghams .
5 Patched together from the remnants of the Docklands ramp which some yonks back had been acquired by Neil , Liverpool 's mini was a pretty unconventional affair — big transistors tweaked with smaller ones , no more then a few feet of flat bottom — and it rode like a ditch .
6 It is a convention in Elizabethan drama that slander is always believed , which can be explained perhaps from the necessities of the limited time available , or is perhaps a truth about life ( how many of us instantly disbelieve bad report ? ) .
7 For our experiments we used a cubical tank of water seeded with silicon carbide grit of fairly uniform size , which was cooled uniformly from the top .
8 With their emphasis on a world of forest spirits and magical dominations , they seem to have differed little from the experiences and practices of mainland Northern Europe .
9 Siddhi , who had been Foreign Minister for 10 years but was considered hostile to Chatichai 's Cambodia policy and to any rapprochement with Vietnam [ see p. 37654 ] , was dropped altogether from the government .
10 Yet he is included quite correctly on the Bayeux memorial to the missing as belonging to the S.A.S. By some error , however , his name is omitted altogether from the Edinburgh University war memorial under the arches of the Old Quad , where daily we used to meet .
11 The Thames and Severn , begun in 1783 , was six years later passing thirty-ton barges into the Thames at Inglesham , but even so the river itself remained largely unimproved and in the 1790s manufactured goods from Birmingham for London were still being carried overland from the end of the Oxford Canal .
12 Some bats can send out a stream of two hundred clicks in a single second , each lasting only a thousandth of a second and spaced sufficiently from the other to allow each echo to be heard .
13 [ These appointments were omitted inadvertently from the roundups of republican appointments on p. 37384 and p. 37460 . ]
14 It 's come away from the zip er er I do n't know whether it 's er
15 Mr Widmer praised the minister for his ‘ sympathetic attitude ’ and said the company had come away from the meeting re-assured that it would not be forced to move .
16 Plaster had come away from the walls from ceiling to floor , and along the lower part the bared cement , originally grey , was stained yellow and smelt of urine .
17 A path wound away from the house , leading through the ridges and furrows of fields long left to nature .
18 The road wound away from the Martin farm into the outskirts of the village .
19 As sad as I am at being wrenched away from the telly , I am led to the bar .
20 Although earnings prospects all over Europe are still excellent the balance has now been slightly tipped away from the equity markets .
21 For normal playback over the viewfinder ( or on a television screen ) , you will need to use the tape-running buttons , and these are generally grouped separately from the camera controls .
22 The seeds tended to be large and heavy and passed through the gut in 13 hours , the passage time inversely correlated with specific gravity of the seeds and had an indirect effect on the distance that seeds were dispersed away from the mother tree .
23 This question can not be considered separately from the issue of how ‘ needs ’ for different kinds of support vary between generations and , for an individual , across a lifetime , and how both of these vary historically .
24 This was firmly rejected by the staff-side reps , who have maintained throughout the negotiations that the original agreement on LW should be adhered to , that it should be considered separately from the rest of the negotiations , and that LW needs to be a flat-rate , across-the-board payment to compensate for the costs incurred by working in London .
25 Like Park , however , Wirth was not arguing that the effects of city life could be considered separately from the rise of capitalist industry .
26 Byrne was carried away from the ring unconscious and died three days later without coming out of his coma .
27 Members of the group known as JADE , who come from the UK and Japan as well as Germany , have analysed the way in which momentum and energy are carried away from the collision by particles in the jets ( DESY preprint 82–086 ) .
28 In most neurons impulses are received by numerous short fibres called dendrites and carried away from the cell by a single long fibre called an axon .
29 While we had been on the opposite bank a new barge had come upriver from the direction of Minya and had moored near the end of the Corniche .
30 Ice cracked away from the hatch at a pressure from inside .
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