Example sentences of "[verb] through from the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It was Thursday 5 September and he was about to leave his office to drive to Bramshill Police College to begin a series of lectures to the Senior Command Course when the call came through from the private office . |
2 | Fearing a tragedy of epic proportions — her mind leapt at once to Penini and then to Miss Arabel — she knocked on the open door and Mr Browning came through from the other room , so haggard and drawn in contrast to his morning self that once more she was convinced something dreadful had happened . |
3 | Then , two minutes before the end of the game , the news came through from the other ground that Sunderland had lost . |
4 | The County Council took into account a wide range of considerations , in including the the information that came through from the local plan authorities , in the preparation of their local plans over the past ten years or more . |
5 | I do n't know who 's got through from the other games , but we 'll take anyone on really I think . |
6 | In recent years the evidence for the health benefits of fibre , or ‘ roughage ’ as it used to be called , has grown so strong that it has filtered through from the medical journals and is now well known to the British and American public . |
7 | Then Irvine broke through from the halfway line to make the score 3–3 . |
8 | There was one obvious difference : she was coming through from the Other Side . |
9 | This is pulled through from the tufted end , a technique particularly useful for vending machine parts and similar to that used for cleaning rifles . |
10 | For the bridge Encore have used rosewood , with the strings fixed through from the rear edge . |
11 | But it 's , it 's , it 's it sort a it 's , I think carrying through from the old borough days |