Example sentences of "[to-vb] [pers pn] from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 We owe it to our children and grandchildren to spare them from the epidemic of smoking-related disease , disability and death from smoking that has marked the middle and later years of the 20th century .
2 This uncertainty might , on the one hand , encourage social commentators in the attitude expressed by a writer in The Economist in 1848 : ‘ In our condition suffering and evil are nature 's admonitions ; they can not be got rid of ; and the impatient attempts of benevolence to banish them from the world by legislation , before benevolence has learnt their object and their end , have always been productive of more evil than good . ’
3 I fell down in a kind of madness , and they had to carry me from the room .
4 ‘ Fairly early on we decided we 'd have separate people doing the Dalek voices because the actors hired to work them from the inside were being engaged more for their physical skills in manipulating Daleks than for their formal acting abilities , made redundant by the energies just to operate them . ’
5 Admiral Paul Rowe , of Rotherham Starfleet Command , was waiting to meet me from the train .
6 These volumes are aimed to provide serious students with the rudiments of the craft , and yet to launch them from the craft into inspired practice .
7 Despite this , the new president of the CSIC , José Mato , decided in November to exclude me from the examination and to cancel the competition .
8 Still not enough to tempt you from the tourist route ?
9 As a comment on Eve 's lofty nature she notes that the serpent ‘ did not try to tempt her from the path of duty by brilliant jewels , rich dresses , worldly luxuries or pleasures , but with the promise of knowledge … and he found in the woman that intense thirst for knowledge that the simple pleasures of picking flowers and talking with Adam did not satisfy ’ .
10 It took half an hour for Rock Hudson and a doctor to pull him from the wreck .
11 I had to isolate her from the rest . ’
12 Ferdinand believed Godoy was scheming for a regency to exclude him from the throne ; Godoy knew that Ferdinand was intriguing against him with the French ambassador .
13 Various accusations , including that of treason , were thereupon levelled against Stratford and attempts were made to exclude him from the parliament which met subsequently .
14 Then they formed up around him to escort him from the arena .
15 With his usual lightning-swift reactions he took advantage of the moment to pull her from the bed , and as she stumbled against him , his arms tightened about her involuntarily .
16 Those with turpentine , for instance , flew southwards if they had been trained in a loft with the smell of that compound blowing in from the north , and northwards if they had learned to smell it from the south .
17 It is unhistorical to assume that children in the last century responded to death in the same way as children today ; children 's attitudes are largely conditioned by those of adults , and in our day the usual adult attitude is to evade the subject of death , to treat it as ‘ morbid ’ and , so far as possible , to exclude it from the home .
18 But Shallis argues that this is hardly surprising , because its very terms of thought are such as to exclude it from the content of all discussion , at the very outset .
19 The place of violence in English labour history has been reconsidered since the earlier historians , notably the Webbs and Hammonds , followed a Fabian predisposition to exclude it from the mainstream of labour action .
20 well yes and therefore they wanted the appeal procedure , erm to make it fair I 'm not trying to put words in your mouth but that , term , to eradicate the possibility that someone could be able to exclude it from the market unjustifiably
21 To understand and explain the behaviour of matter it is sufficient to observe it from the outside .
22 ‘ It 'll probably be easy to eliminate them from the enquiry ; we are n't going to frame anybody or hassle anybody or pull anything heavy . ’
23 A spokesman said detectives hoped that if the suspects were not the terrorists they — or someone who recognised them — would come forward to eliminate them from the inquiry .
24 But still less did she want to make a scene or create any kind of curiosity amongst the people she had just left , so she allowed him to lead her from the room , saying , ‘ Yes , we needed to discuss those — er — charts , did n't we , Dr Russell ? ’ in case anyone was still listening .
25 The cylinders were causing minor explosions and we had to tackle it from the outside , using the protection of adjoining buildings and cars .
26 Prior to completion of the missives a meeting took place at the farm when an offer was made to purchase it from the defender at a price of £65,000 .
27 Well that was what they call it , tortoise stove , used to be a big stove and that ai n't got no grate in they had er they used to feed it from the top ,
28 It 's an antibiotic stuff to clean it from the inside .
29 ‘ It was a big shock , ’ admitted Dorothy who went to Buckingham Palace with her husband , Ron , to receive it from the Queen .
30 Oh , our front passenger seat wo n't lock either , you 've got to lock it from the inside , ta
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