Example sentences of "he [vb -s] from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The Government have made clear their opposition and abhorrence for the fatwa to which the hon. Gentleman referred , but he differs from the view of his colleagues on the Opposition Front Bench if he wishes to stop trade or perhaps impose an embargo on trade with Iran or , indeed , any other country .
2 Erm would the convenor say erm what he understands from the statement of faith and the statement of faith alone erm to be the teaching on the atonement that is , wh what are we taught about the atonement from the statement of faith ?
3 And whether he changes his system , ploughs his moorland , reseeds his pasture , increases his stocking rate , drains his bog and fertilises his meadow is strongly influenced by the advice and grant-aid he receives from the Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food ( MAFF ) .
4 The most dramatic difference in the two pictures as seen by the remote observer is in the nature of radiation he receives from the object .
5 The buyer of the contract has made 100 profit which he receives from the seller of the contract .
6 Not until after the middle of the seventeenth century do we once more find a government clerk making use of verse as an outlet after he has become psychotic , and then , as he writes from the asylum , he has nothing to lose by revealing himself .
7 He writes from the perspective of later years when the dons of Magdalen were anything but congenial society to him .
8 One , he has from the start recognized your talent ; and two , he is in love with you . ’
9 After external examination of the pubic region and vulva , the doctor will pass a speculum into the vagina and take the various samples that he needs from the vagina and cervix .
10 He swabs from the wrist upwards , tattoos
11 And he could finance his bid with the cash he raises from the sale of players like Lindsay Curry , Ricky Wade and Stephen Baxter .
12 By employing this structured procedure the designer now has control over the data he recalls from the turnkey system .
13 For Schiller , Greek tragedy poses a problem which he approaches from the point of view of Kantian ethics .
14 As a Harijan he benefits from the Government 's reservation scheme for these ‘ backward classes ’ and is thus assured of his job : there were only 40 eligible candidates from his category for 100 posts , whereas there were 5,000 higher-caste Hindus contesting the remaining 80 posts .
15 I … my … me … ’ he pleads from the manuscript in front of me .
16 He dives from the chair and hurtles to the door .
17 ‘ Oh yes , he swings from the box , on a curtain , on to the stage , as Mr Puff .
18 There are poems to Rosa which he takes from the trash .
19 He has now fitted three rainwater barrels to use in the garden to reduce the amount of water he takes from the main .
20 And then he fires from the hip while
21 Yeah then he fires from the hip and does n't far too strongly .
22 He does not , however , explain why the causal influence of the forces of production is always , and necessarily , greater than that of individuals , and only takes up this point in a second argument , in which he shifts from the discussion of character traits to consider the role played by individuals of extraordinary talent .
23 It is very hard to pin down just exactly how Richter weaves his magic spell ; that unique full sound he draws from the instrument at all dynamic levels , whilst utilising a seemingly limitless variety of articulation ; the scintillating combination of intellect , technical bravura , and extraordinary interpretative perception ?
24 This was a cause dear to Gandhi 's heart , and he seems from the beginning to have been sympathetically intrigued by Irwin as a man .
25 When he emerges from the caravan , Pa 's reaction is not quite as imagined , and strikes me as rather odd .
26 So even if he believed that from an economic point of view the best decision would be to deny any recovery for emotional injury , he would still ask whether the role of law in encouraging reliance and coordination would be much damaged if he ignored the precedents , and , if it would , whether this loss would be made up in the gains he foresees from the change .
27 On the other hand , it might he argued that when he moves from the concept of impersonal truth to the concept of a personal God , he is distinguishing , in traditional Advaitin fashion , between higher and lower levels of truth or reality .
28 Recalling , no doubt , the sad disruptions of her own early life , she declared that ‘ our grand study has been to make him happy ’ , and added that under their Rousseau-inspired regime , in which Basil was taught nothing ‘ but what he learns from the evidence of his senses ’ , he had become ‘ certainly the most contented child I ever saw ; the least disposed to be fretful . ’
29 For instance , although he borrows the concept of mood from linguistics , he recognizes from the outset that , in contrast to ordinary language , narrative only knows the indicative mood ( there is no imperative or subjunctive forms of narrative ) , and that if his use of the term is to have any value at all it must be ‘ stretched ’ and given a metaphorical function .
30 He 's got a very good serve , but the percentage of points he makes from the baseline is better than with the volley .
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