Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [pers pn] from the " in BNC.

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1 Only the line of grim cages among whose bars whined the winter wind , and above them the great plane trees that bent across the sky , their leafless branches bending in the wind like twisted hands that came down towards him from the angry sky .
2 Looking down below them from the top , they saw that a small crater with the remains of a dried-up lake in it was emitting sulphurous vapours from several points .
3 There were any number of laden country folk in this concourse , and within the hour there would be still more crowding down upon them from the town , after the market .
4 And even as its sound struck the cage about him , there was a crash and a judder and the sky was falling in upon him from the darkening night .
5 Small boys spat down on him from the safety of high windows and their mothers clenched their buttocks and turned away their glowing cheeks .
6 Unable to get to our treasure , they were decimated by the rain of bolts our forebears showered down on them from the tower of this church .
7 A square of amber light shone down on them from the open hatch .
8 Above , Ruth 's white face looked down on her from the window .
9 Singly and in groups , these aristocratic figures look down on us from the walls of the Crousel-Robelin-Bama gallery , proud survivors of a vanishing world .
10 International art , culture and politics , as immortalised by Pino Settanni , look down on us from the walls of the Hadrian Thomas gallery until 28 June .
11 If it be objected that no beginning writer shops around in this way among the idioms handed down to him from the past , the evidence is that certain beginning writers do shop around in just this way ; Ezra Pound was one of them , and he is by no means so exceptional as is supposed .
12 There seems little doubt that Trow Gill once brought down a stream , this entering as a waterfall at the gap now occupied by boulders , and this theory is confirmed by the dry channel coming directly down to it from the heights above .
13 We have a traditional culture , which comes down to us from the time of the Renaissance , and our literature , which is rich , draws its life blood therefrom .
14 A couple of anachronisms fighting it out here while real life moved in on them from the east almost unnoticed .
15 It is occasionally possible , just for brief moments , to find the words that will unlock the doors of all those many mansions inside the head and express something — perhaps not much , just something — of the crush of the information that presses in on us from the way a crow flies over and the way a man walks and the look of a street and from what we did one day a dozen years ago .
16 As with Frankie , so much of the pleasure is bound up with the sense of something breaking out all over the surfaces of everyday life , and you being in on it from the start .
17 As I write , he nods down at me from the wall beside my desk ; shining brass-reel in place , cast and flies still ready for action , waiting for the last trumpet to sound .
18 ‘ And do n't dare tell me it 's going to be too tough for a woman , ’ Mariana shouted , as she glared down at him from the saloon .
19 After a few minutes , he became aware of Peter Dawson 's portrait staring down at him from the top of the piano , and he stopped .
20 He looked up , expecting to see the grey skinny man staring down at him from the steps .
21 A week later he was in the chair at a meeting of the Humanist Society when he suddenly had a vision of Bill Brice looking down at him from the moulding in the corner of the ceiling with a crown of thorns on his head , and look of sweet forgiveness on his face ; whereupon he stood up and made a long , confused speech about the hunger for God that gnawed inside each of us , however stiff-necked and jeering we might be ; which caused great embarrassment to all those present , and even greater embarrassment later to progressive theologians on the staff , who felt that such old-fashioned emotive conversions could only undo all their good work .
22 In fact on a couple of occasions he had thought he had seen strange green faces peering down at him from the branches .
23 And mummy 's smiling in at him from the outside , look she 's hanging the washing out pretending not to notice what 's going on .
24 The beep in the earpiece is when you 're on the phone , either to somebody within the press , or outside the press , and another call comes through for you from the switchboard , and you 're engaged , obviously , and so they camp onto your extension number , and you receive a beep in the earpiece , now you can speak to these people if you key in R star 1 .
25 He would always teach trainees : " If a client asks you a question you do n't understand , say — " Hold on a minute sir , a call has just come through to me from the States " — put him on hold then , and ask me .
26 Erm what , what was the feeling that came over to you from the tenants ' group at the time ?
27 What rake off for you from the cemeteries ?
28 He could not find Strawberry but after a time Cowslip came up to him from the other end of the hall .
29 I 'll hand them up to you from the bottom of the steps , and you stay by the cart . ’
30 I had reached the letter " C " and as the word " Castration " looked up at me from the page I was jerked back to Rory .
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