Example sentences of "to us through the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He reveals him to us through the operas , which ‘ lay at the core of Mozart 's life as a thinking artist ’ and on which Mr Till has worked as a producer .
2 Passers-by are frequent : children to and from school , neighbours shopping , horse riders , and frequently friends who waved to us through the windows .
3 Sheriff Irvine Smith has again displayed to us through the cases themselves and through his own deft and inhumane commentary , the continuing mores of the Scottish nation .
4 It is therefore an immensely energetic , hopeful verb — and because our states of mind are influenced , without our conscious knowledge , by the language that surrounds us , this energy and hope is ‘ fed ’ to us through the verb .
5 Family and kinship relations in an Essex village are laid open to us through the diary .
6 In a similar way the Desert Fathers , whose ascetical practices frequently seem to pass into the range of farce , are regarded at least with affection and more often with deep admiration , partly of course because of the delightful anecdotery that has collected around them , and is known to us through the works of writers like Helen Waddell .
7 The world would sound very strange to us through the ears of a frog , for we would hear the calls of other frogs , the noises made by its predators , and little else .
8 It is estimated that as much as 98% of dioxin intake by humans comes to us through the food chain , notably meat , milk , fish and eggs .
9 Mrs passing a message to us through the time planner like that
10 That master would seem to have been Taglioni , now filtered to us through the Bournonville version .
11 Or at least , we are told so daily by politicians , police , judges , and journalists who speak to us through the media of newspapers and television .
12 These may in turn be sub-divided ; goods possessed may comprise either the results of private purchase or goods allocated by the state , while goods not possessed tend to fall into two categories : first , those we encounter as material forms , in particular the built environment , the goods of our acquaintances or those in the high street shop , and secondly , goods we do not experience directly , but which appear to us through the media — for example in television , magazines and advertising .
13 Having said that , this place has been made ‘ valid through prayer ’ and can be seen as a sacrament of God 's coming to us through the demands of human life .
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