Example sentences of "[vb pp] from [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The sounds had come from a hundred yards east of the dell .
2 The passage of the Riot Act of 1715 , which made assembling for political ( as well as other ) purposes potentially a capital offence , reveals how far the Whigs had come from the early days when they had actively promoted political demonstrations and deliberately sought an alliance with " the crowd " .
3 Similar support for a modified accelerator theory as a determinant of investment has come from the recent studies of Catinat ( 1991 ) and Ford and Poret ( 1990 ) .
4 The remainder come from the following categories :
5 Both animals , with many others , had come from the higher parts of the rivers .
6 Much later , it seemed , she awoke and when she turned over and looked towards where the chanting had come from the African men and women had eaten and were packing away and decamping .
7 We do not know in detail whence the monks were recruited ; but on the whole they seem mainly to have come from the upper classes , and perhaps from the families of substantial town-dwellers .
8 It was obvious that not all these people could have come from the upper classes .
9 They claimed the move had been simply to bring Scotland into line with England and Wales and that the initiative had come from the big bookmakers , who would be the main beneficiaries .
10 Here , COURSE and LECTURER come from the original entities and TIMETABLE stems from information about the coincidence of the two , that is , their relationship .
11 Since 1950 my influences have come from the Flemish Primitives , Frances de la Tour and Stanley Spencer .
12 They were country people in a sense that Melanie was not , although she had just come from the green fields and they might have lived in London all their lives .
13 But the most cohesive programme to yet be devised has come from the United Nations Environmental Programme ( UNEP ) .
14 The main differences between the account of the journalist and the sociologist come from the different orientations that each brings to the subject of study .
15 It is undeniable that a great deal of important and fundamental research has come from the several centres of excellence in the USA .
16 The pattern of hits and false alarms in the two studies is relatively similar , thus Table 5.6 shows the data grouped from the two studies to increase the number of observations in each cell .
17 This chapter reviews the evidence on the issue that has accrued from the different methodologies available .
18 It was a time of great British expansion and it is thought that , in the guise of ships ' cats , they were scattered from the British Isles all over the globe in a comparatively short space of time .
19 The days passed with the jeeps carrying the dead and wounded from the forward areas stopping briefly at Brigade H.Q on their way to the beaches .
20 What is more , the narrator can be seen to strike a ridiculous pose within this text in a way supposedly omitted from the Anglo-Norman fabliaux : drawing attention to himself with his unnecessary , insincere or ignored apostrophes .
21 Similarly , Wordsworth is commonly bowdlerized into a ‘ Nature poet ’ , and his frequent accounts of human beings in economic difficulties are dismissed as his ‘ revolutionary growing-pains ’ — to be omitted from the safe anthologies in which he is. commonly presented to the adolescent mind .
22 Based on the experience that very few who opt to hold offers as insurance actually enrol , their numbers have been omitted from the later calculations .
23 Omitted from the meaningful introductions to clients , business lunches , meetings and golfing sessions , women solicitors fail to acquire the vital ‘ client base . ’
24 The amendment also specified that candidates had to have resigned from the armed forces or security forces .
25 The men on the Committee , led by Francis Hawkins and E.G. Mandeville Roe , then resigned from the British Fascists and joined Mosley , bringing with them a copy of its membership list .
26 He had others in his grizzled russet tonsure , dropped from the higher branches as the wind stirred them .
27 Wes smiled and looked up at me and for a moment the tough mask dropped from the grubby features and in the dark wild eyes I read sheer delight .
28 Dropped from the retail catalogues , return
29 And for that reason I believe erm it should be deleted from the locational criteria in terms of the area of search around Greater York .
30 21.1 In the event that any or any part of the terms , conditions or provisions contained in this Agreement shall be determined invalid , unlawful or unenforceable to any extent such term , condition or provision shall be severed from the remaining terms , conditions and provisions which shall continue to be valid and enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law .
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