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

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1 Unlike Schleiermacher , Hegel had a large number of followers who sought to carry on from the point he had reached .
2 The creative way of handling tensions is to be prepared to forgive right from the beginning .
3 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 .
4 A new policy allowing 240 spouses to immigrate annually from the mainland went into effect in early January , ending a 43-year ban .
5 ‘ so you really think , ’ she said , ‘ that that poor little chap is going to zoom in from the clouds and wipe us all out ? ’
6 On being told that the men still unaccounted for could not be contacted by the trapped men , the Manager asked for a volunteer to go down from the surface and search inwards from the main shaft .
7 They would be perhaps regarded as thick as two short planks , er they would not be happy , they would be struggling to do work that was not honestly within their capacities , that being the case , they would almost certainly have to go down from the University .
8 In the second group , there were those countries , like Kenya , who had never been able to borrow much from the banks .
9 They stand to benefit little from the insider dealing prohibition .
10 As a Race Today editorial ( in October 1974 ) put it , ‘ the section to benefit most from the trade unions are white men over the age of thirty-five .
11 As the more industrially developed countries in the region , Kenya and Zimbabwe stood to benefit most from the association .
12 So when voters began deserting the CDS in droves , the People 's Party stood to benefit most from the defections .
13 Consumers in Scotland , where the heating season is the longest in the UK , are expected to suffer most from the change .
14 At my parents house , erm , in that , we 've had an extension in there , so the garden 's not there any more , but erm , I used , the light used to come in from the windows , so of at , at the angle to the bath , so I could n't lift my leg up , so I rub it gently like this , and I 'd watch the told me where I missed bits and
15 If our much smaller , and much more numerous local museums are also to come in from the cold , the only route open to them is the one of providing a stimulating and memorable learning experience .
16 Well there was always the parlour , you must have the parlour and er you , you had two living rooms and the one was the parlour and there was a cellar underneath the parlour and er the stairs used to come in from the back and go up , up the stairs over the entrance to the cellar but the stairs used to run up there underneath the stairs was the entrance to the cellar , there was a door , so that you could n't just walk down the cellar without opening the door you see , but apart from that there was er there was just the two , two bedrooms .
17 I I 've got a bill to come in from the electrician for his call-out charge he diagnosed that it 's was not an electrical fault and then thought it was an electrical fault by the noise , it was making a fizzing noise but he does n't th he said it 's , it 's the pump the pump is on the way out it needs replacing house is built in nineteen eighty five !
18 When results began to come in from the field researchers , Highlander served as the collection , organisation and computation centre , and held workshops to allow participants to draw some very marked comparisons and contrasts from the raw data .
19 Master of Ceremonies was Branch Chairman Malcolm Cork , Booth White , who has decided to stand down from the position .
20 But it has reached the stage where Group 4 have now ‘ lost ’ Sir Norman ’ — Labour 's Frank Dobson on the announcement that the Tory chairman is to stand down from the board of Group 4 .
21 PETER RAWLINS , a former partner with accountants Arthur Andersen , has emerged as the International Stock Exchange 's next chief executive following the decision of Jeffrey Knight to stand down from the post , writes John Moore .
22 By Monday , Rosyth will have updated its bid to upgrade the docks for the nuclear refit work with a fixed-price bid , which is unlikely to differ greatly from the £147 million indicative price submitted in December .
23 The inspiration for the first stones seems to come less from the East than from Bronze-age pieces found and imitated .
24 You part of the horn , you dredged them up , cos you used t the only thing we saw taken out , then this old fella used to come down from the Museum or whatever he was and he used to be pleased he 'd stay there all day and pick up them all .
25 They used to come down from the North-German , Swiss , English , American .
26 The pilot survey should be the crucial stage at which the surveyor is forced to come down from the ivory tower and communicate with the respondents .
27 Etam sales , up 32 per cent to £84.3m on an increase in trading space of 29 per cent , appeared to benefit from the hot summer weather and its low-priced fashion for younger women seemed not to suffer greatly from the effects of higher mortgages .
28 I was able to benefit greatly from the work already completed by this group and by the advice and encouragement which they provided .
29 I rather think the Liberals , who stand to benefit greatly from the SNP initiative , should have supported it .
30 For example , under the Land Compensation Act 1973 property owners are entitled to compensation for depreciation in the value of their land caused by such things as noise , vibration , smells , and fumes , resulting from public works , The underlying reasoning is that since the public is presumed to benefit greatly from the building of a motorway ( for example ) , private citizens who suffer as a result of its construction should not have to bear their loss for the sake of that wider public interest .
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