Example sentences of "[be] [adj] [to-vb] [pers pn] from " in BNC.

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1 In the absence of other voices making the same moral argument sufficiently loudly , we should perhaps be grateful to hear it from the very heart of the establishment .
2 I regret to advise however , that on this occasion it will not be possible to excuse you from attendance .
3 While we have examined Oakeshott as a conservative thinker therefore we must be careful to distinguish him from the religious conservatism of Burke and from the mainstream forms of conservatism which Huntington identified in the aristocratic and situational theories as ideological defences of the ancien régime or of established institutions .
4 ‘ 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 . ’
5 You like my mother and yet you will be content to dismiss her from your life ? ’
6 You 'll be able to borrow it from the office downstairs and view it in the library .
7 She found herself wondering idly whether , if she and Johnny were to make love now , here beneath the apple tree , Ben would be able to see them from his garden , or Mrs Draper from her bedroom window .
8 Going along the road , er on the A Nineteen , from the north towards er the village er if one assumed that there were to be some development on site D forty , would you be able to see it from the road ?
9 Centres wishing to participate will be able to pilot them from August 1992 .
10 In deciding whether to begin or continue litigation , one major factor is whether a party will have to pay the costs or be able to recover them from the other party .
11 In this situation the buyer , as owner of the goods , will be able to recover them from a person having a legal authority to sell them , for example , a sheriff acting in execution of a writ of fi fa to which the SGA 1979 will apply .
12 It would mean returning to Wellington with a broken heart , and despite their short acquaintance she already knew it would be a long time before she would be able to evict him from her thoughts .
13 If we are quick , we may be able to stop him from desecrating the site . ’
14 A metre and a half of copper wire with wooden handgrips at each end went in his pocket plus a box of bullets for his Walther in case he should be able to reclaim it from the masthead .
15 Now he knew that nobody , not even Buddie , would be able to save him from Rosie 's deadly teeth .
16 You 're not going to be able to protect it from radiation , are you ? or brain damage caused by lead in the atmosphere ? or cancer caused by preservatives in food ? ’
17 He said I am sure I am sure that neither death nor life nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord .
18 ‘ Neither death nor life nor angels , nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come , nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God … ’
19 I came this morning because I think you may be able to help me from your knowledge-of the family and of the area .
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 so if you get to the shop you should n't be able to buy them from unless you took
22 NOTE Osteoporosis can not be cured once it is present , but younger women from the time of the menopause may be able to prevent it from developing through hormone replacement therapy .
23 The eye is the most tell-tale detail of any animal shape and it is a great advantage to be able to obscure it from view .
24 The face will fill out , the limbs will unwind and the real Gemma will emerge , so that by the time she is six months old even a stranger will be able to tell her from Carla Marie .
25 You might be able to get it from a library .
26 As an important control , this sentence was neutral with respect to the rest of the passage , so that subjects would be unable to reconstruct it from what they remembered of other sentences in the passage .
27 IT probably wo n't be enough to save them from relegation to Division II , but Dundee HSFP reproduced some of last season 's promotion-winning style in regaining much lost pride at Mayfield on Saturday .
28 Ball believes that PowerLan is particularly suited to users that want the option of growing their networks and interlinking them across different systems , and that these facilities will be enough to distinguish it from its competitors .
29 To sum up , the duty to act in the interests of the company ( i.e. the shareholders ) imposes only a weak control on managerial discretion , since any plausible assertion that a course of action is designed to increase the company 's financial well-being will be enough to protect it from attack .
30 When Mrs Grandison had rejoined them it was still not quite half-past two , but Mark came in to say that as everybody was already waiting in the hall and it would be difficult to restrain them from buying things much longer , the bazaar might as well be opened immediately .
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