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

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1 ‘ Mind you , Cal will 've phoned from the villa to find out her results .
2 Similarly , the sentence-grammarian can not remain immured from the discourse he encounters in his daily life .
3 An ankle strap will prevent the heel lever being released or the crampon being lost should it become disconnected from the boot .
4 Researchers have recently discovered small regions of genetic material in animal cells that can become detached from the chromosomes , enjoy an independent existence for a while , and then re-integrate at a different chromosomal location .
5 Theoretically ( it would be argued ) these items may become detached from the flea and be lost in the collections .
6 How may Catholics ensure that the Eucharist does not become separated from the salvation it witnesses to in Christ ?
7 However , during late pregnancy and early lactation , such treated ewes will soon become reinfected from the ingestion of overwintered larvae on the pasture .
8 It is important that the design process does not become divorced from the end users .
9 Two dangers of the purchaser-provider split are that collaboration among health care professionals may be undermined and the provider aspects of the public health role may become removed from the purchasing role .
10 Whereas boys may become alienated from the means of learning , girls would be alienated more swiftly by the content of learning .
11 He did not seem to appreciate the contradiction between his virulent denunciations of parliamentary democracy and the increasingly close economic ties being woven between Spain and the western democracies ; nor between his belief that economic nationalism was best and the fact that unless Spain liberalized its economic policies , it would remain isolated from the growth then beginning to be enjoyed by the rest of Europe .
12 She had always resented Luke , and feared the way he made her feel — because she must have sensed from the beginning the power he could and did have over her ; because he had deprived her of himself when he had had her dismissed from that very first job back in South Africa ; because something had led him to misjudge and despise her , and he was unable to see the truth ; because she had always known that he could break her heart …
13 That much the reader may have gathered from the argument so far .
14 Colleagues , as , as conference will have heard from the mover of motion three , motion six , not prepared to withdraw and the C E C is therefore asking you to oppose both .
15 We 'll then have heard from the hospital and can decide what to do about the situation .
16 But , I mean , she 's been down there and must be gone now something has , but I said surely she would have heard from the police if it 'd been
17 You would never have guessed from the way the Parsons talked that they were childless .
18 ‘ Ladies and gentlemen , I must apologise for dragging you in here at such short notice , but as you will have guessed from the Meeting Notice the urgency … ’
19 Many of the amino acids are coded by more than one triplet ( as you might have guessed from the fact that there are 64 triplets and only 20 amino acids ) .
20 This idea may even have developed from the hunting practices and rituals , in which men dressed as animals to be able to approach near enough to use their short-weapons effectively .
21 If either of us had had any sense we 'd have realised from the start something like this had happened .
22 Many employers ‘ contracted out ’ of the Graduated Pension Scheme and agreed to pay at least the same amount as their employees would have received from the State under the graduated scheme , from their own occupational scheme .
23 Those future profits include grants that he might have received from the government for installing drains ( these can cover up to 80 per cent of the cost of the scheme ) and the value of anticipated production , which may be doubled by subsidies under the EEC 's Common Agricultural Policy .
24 The form ( which you will have received from the Court ) for certifying loss of earnings should be passed to the Personnel Department .
25 But there is at least a hint in the Bill that in certain circumstances opted-out schools ( to be referred to as grant-maintained schools ) might receive extra funds from the DES : although in general such schools are to receive funding equivalent to that which they would have received from the LEA , Clause 67 ( 3 ) and ( 4 ) lay down that for certain ‘ special purposes ’ extra non-recurrent or recurrent grants may be forthcoming .
26 They must have fallen from the loft and hopped inside , and touched something in there that brought the rusty flap crashing down to entomb them .
27 The evidence actually tends to be ambiguous ( West 1969 ; Jones 1979b ) as indications of timberwork at the lip of the pit may be connected with the superstructure and planking in the base may have fallen from the walls or roof lining .
28 Just as her childhood amusements could have originated from the pages of a 1930s ' children 's book , so Diana 's upbringing reflected the values of a bygone age .
29 She had no clear idea of how it could have rolled from the table , for it had seemed perfectly secure when she had put it there .
30 You could buy salmon , which I suspect could have come from the King 's Reach skirting Balmoral ) for 2/6d a pound ; and there was no dearth of whisky for which I had yet to acquire a taste .
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