Example sentences of "[adv prt] to [pers pn] from the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | 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 . |
2 | 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 . |
3 | 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 . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | Erm what , what was the feeling that came over to you from the tenants ' group at the time ? |
6 | He could not find Strawberry but after a time Cowslip came up to him from the other end of the hall . |
7 | I 'll hand them up to you from the bottom of the steps , and you stay by the cart . ’ |
8 | I held it out to him from the pouch . |
9 | Alice Mair had heard the car and came out to him from the kitchen , wiping her hands . |
10 | He did n't pause as Dessie Burns called out to him from the hardware shop , he did n't notice Mr Kennedy looking over his glasses at all the bottles and apothecary jars in the window display of the chemist 's shop . |
11 | But it is a feudalism where inequalities and poverty have been intensified by British colonialism and which has in the last thirty-seven years since independence been in a state of flux caused by the varying stages of capitalism which reach out to it from the towns and cities of the Indian sub-continent . |
12 | As soon as we entered the restaurant the proprietor came out to us from the kitchen , rubbing his hands oilier on a tea towel . |
13 | " Anywhere , " we called back to him from the bow . |
14 | Loans frequently come straight back to us from the purchase of Western goods . |
15 | Between the Wars the cars were open at first , and drivers had to be well-clad in oilskins to avoid the cascade of water which poured on to them from the canopy of the open-fronted trams . |
16 | He spins a tiny triangle of silk a few millimetres in length and deposits a drop of sperm on to it from the gland that lies underneath his body . |
17 | No need to disturb the household , if we can come round to it from the other side . ’ |