Example sentences of "and [adv] from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Carman , who has already described her as ‘ some woman journalist ’ and ‘ some woman freelance ’ , attacks urgently and relentlessly from the start .
2 No more safe trotting to and fro from the convent .
3 I ran to and fro from the kitchen for some time with saucepans and kettles of boiling water .
4 They ferried plates to and fro from the kitchen , where Rose and Victorine supervised what was to come next .
5 Strudwick , still desperately trying to put rugby league on the map in the capital , said : ‘ It 's been hectic this week , having to dash to and fro from the training ground to the hospital .
6 However , it is possible that the fluid seen during that visitation once saturated the body but had leaked from the cadaver during the intervening 250 years and thence from the coffin , owing to seasonal fluctuations in the humidity within the vault .
7 John Power of Kilkenny has wrought tremendous harm and damage on Wexford and Offaly from the middle of the field , alongside Michael Phelan , so there 's a huge responsibility on the shoulders of Michael Coleman .
8 The latter — that is , those living with spouses and with younger people — are most likely to obtain support from those living with them and little from the state .
9 Breathe deeply and slowly from the stomach .
10 Town started very positively against the makeshift Bracknell team , and right from the kick off , Abingdon asserted their authority on the game .
11 But , for the children there was a lot of sadness and they desperately wanted , as I think all , most children of divorced do , to keep in touch with both parents and right from the beginning of a separation .
12 The vibrant ‘ Zoo Station ’ kicked everything off and right from the word go it was going to be something special .
13 In this drama , words are deeds , and right from the start Henry talks like a winner .
14 Bill did , and right from the start he was thrilled by the part .
15 In his other hand a grenade with the pin removed so he could n't put it down to free himself from the handcuffs , and so from the chair , and so from the room .
16 In his other hand a grenade with the pin removed so he could n't put it down to free himself from the handcuffs , and so from the chair , and so from the room .
17 A trail of slow-moving headlights slides away and down from the arena like oozing lava snaking away from Mother .
18 It was bobbing up and down from the wash of a smart motorboat which had swept by , filled with haughty-looking Venetians with faces so medieval that they could have stepped straight from the history books .
19 The mantri looked it up and down from the doorway without saying a word .
20 Downstairs a Disco will bring the tired and the weary in from the cattle drives and down from the cash tills. the Saloon will stay open late .
21 His pictures were stubbornly not nice : he called for carpenters ' pencils of rough graphite rather than the refined Fabers , crayons of a denser black , and later squeezed his colour messily and thickly from the tube direct when he was in the mood .
22 UNCTAD 's annual report on the least developed countries ( LDCs ) , issued on Feb. 11 , said that these countries could benefit from the new international situation and especially from the settlement of long-standing conflicts , which would permit resources to be diverted from military purposes and the care of refugees to improve economic prospects .
23 The effects of ammonia , released by livestock farming and naturally from the ground in rural areas , are not fully understood and are currently being investigated .
24 Eleven tracks , digitally re-mastered , include : Message to Love , Sgt Pepper , All Along the Watchtower , Voodoo Chile , Machine Gun , Dolly Dagger and In From The Storm .
25 ‘ Having identified where the focused technology effort is needed we are definitely getting much better at transferring knowledge around the BPX world — and in from the outside , ’ says Jenkins .
26 Gently brush hair upwards and outwards from the nape of the neck , for fullness and swing .
27 He let everyone think that he was calling from his own area , and not from the middle of their territory .
28 ‘ So even before the passing of the Crown Proceedings Act 1947 the fact that the suit was brought to enforce jus publicum was not of itself sufficient to displace the ordinary rule that a defendant was entitled to the usual undertaking in damages as a condition of the grant of any interlocutory injunction against him , though the undertaking was exacted from the relator and not from the Crown on whose behalf the Attorney-General was the nominal plaintiff in the suit .
29 Spits differ chiefly from offshore bars in that they spring from the coast and are supplied with material mainly by longshore drift and not from the sea floor .
30 Several seconds passed before Isabel realised her name had come from beyond the wall and not from the man whose fingers still gently caressed her cheek .
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