Example sentences of "[vb infin] from [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Cast your votes in the the Awards , which are sponsored by the Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror in conjunction with the British Videogram Association , and you could win from our stunning prize line-up : A SEAT Ibiza SLXi , worth around £7,500 , which has a System Porsche 1.2 fuel-injected engine , complete with three-way catalyser .
2 He does know from his preliminary investigation of the accounts that the group is virtually insolvent — and I have his permission to convey his findings to you .
3 ‘ As you should know from your own experiences ’ — he glanced up at the framed portrait of Commonweal School staff and pupils , September 1948 — ‘ the notion that the camera never lies is a fallacy .
4 The government predicted that the deficit would shrink from 17,000 million pesos in 1990 to 1,400 million in 1991 , and that inflation would fall from its current rate of 12.2 per cent to 9.5 per cent by the end of the year .
5 Abstracting from inevitable stochastic disturbances , the neutrality of money requires that output and employment should never deviate from their full employment values .
6 Once again I can only speak from my own experience of what my patients have told me .
7 You can now speak from your Higher Self to the other person 's Higher Self .
8 ‘ And do I assume from your obvious excitement that you now wish to go ? ’
9 Like other new-minted pidgin languages , it gives insights into the universal linguistic blueprint we may inherit from our sapient ancestors of 40,000 years ago , at the beginning of modern times .
10 A company can borrow from its clearing bank via an overdraft facility attached to its current account .
11 So Dr Palcic and his team are developing a second test to help decide who might benefit from their first test — they are trying to determine whether a patient might have signs of lung cancer by looking at cells coughed up in his sputum .
12 Many of you support them faithfully in prayer and I know we will all benefit from their challenging ministry as they share with us something of their work in Turkey .
13 A combination of these techniques can benefit from their individual strengths , whilst at the same time compensating for their individual weaknesses .
14 Banks and buildings societies are perfectly within their rights to choose who should benefit from their special offers .
15 Local charities and causes will benefit from their hard work and the target is to beat last year 's total .
16 Such polarities were evidently valuable aids to several generations of Wölflinn 's pupils who could benefit from his personal teaching as well as the rather more rigid theory in his books .
17 Some examples of how Reader 's Digest customers can benefit from our DOUBLE PAYOUT PLAN …
18 Now your Company can benefit from our trained trainers .
19 My work was during my student days , when much hampered with other cares , and I can excuse them for not thinking it what they would expect from their future minister .
20 ‘ Many people expect a standard from members of the Royal Family , which they do n't expect from their own families .
21 Public confidence in the police is enhanced when people know what they can expect from their local police force , and when outsiders are let into the process of inspecting how they work .
22 One early sign of the rewards the FDP could expect from its moderating role was the election of one of its leaders , Theoder Heuss , as Federal President in September 1949 .
23 If that sounds like the sort of utterance one might expect from your typical entrepreneur , it is probably because Michael Hirst is a great believer in the art .
24 For that plus all the news you 'd expect from your favourite lunchtime show , join Angus , Lloyd and me tomorrow at five past one .
25 If we read ‘ Ash-Wednesday ’ through with Tate 's commentary at our elbow , we see at any given point what he means : he has a good ear , as we might expect from his own poems ( which are however metrical , as ‘ Ash-Wednesday ’ is n't ) .
26 As a broad generalization there is much truth in this , and both groups can usefully remember from their own education how sometimes learning is " taught " and at other times " caught " .
27 Many teachers , I have found , can remember from their own schooldays the shock and guilt they felt when a teacher finally broke down in the face of what , to the class , had seemed to be ‘ just having a bit of fun ’ .
28 A staid nun , with a set routine and customs ; you would remember from your few weeks in the novitiate how careful Dame Frances was to douse the fire with water .
29 Then there are those we can all remember from our own schooldays who just ca n't teach at all , though we are unable to recall from our own experience any example of the stratagem reported by one of our informants .
30 Eventually the guard climbed aboard and entered Mrs Ross 's carriage and demanded to know who had pulled the communication cord which none of the passengers could see from their seated position .
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