Example sentences of "from it [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Jackson quotes Freud 's view that something has to be added to what is novel and unfamiliar to make it uncanny ; this something is ‘ nothing new or alien , but something which is familiar and old — established in the mind and become alienated from it through the process of repression ’ ( p. 66 ) .
2 The first step is to take the oldest product and plot the estimated annual revenue from it over the planning period as shown for product A ( Figure 2.1 ) .
3 The prosecutor 's pretrial dossier , which contains a substantial input by the police , has a considerable influence on the outcome of the case since the judge works from it at the trial in developing the case and examining witnesses and accused alike .
4 What 's the main thing missing from it at the moment ?
5 like a bit not pointless , well it , it 's just that I do n't really , I 'm not getting anything from it at the moment so
6 It is still known as The Street and , after rejoining the A683 , again departs from it at the site of an old toll bar , branching off as a rough track to visit the hamlet of Stennerskeugh .
7 The Tirajana apartments are ideal for those wishing to enjoy the nightlife and then get away from it at the end of the day .
8 Homogeneous catalysts are compounds of metals that dissolve in the reaction mixture and which must be separated from it at the end .
9 The precocity displayed by Ypres and Ghent in securing a candidate favourable to their industrial future was not to be imitated in the rest of France in the twelfth century ; still , other rulers , particularly those of Champagne , learned from it of the profit to be derived from allying with the increasingly powerful mercantile or industrial classes .
10 Eliot borrowed from it for The Waste Land , thus making it permanently famous ; Pound could not have known of it in 1911 , but if he had then visited the Templars ' cavern-church in Aubeterre he could hardly have failed to remember it in the light of jessie Weston 's argument .
11 One of the pairs identified by Arp is the galaxy NGC 43 19 and the object Markarian 205 , which lies only 42 arc seconds away from it on the sky , and might be a quasar or a peculiar galaxy .
12 The device driver then compresses any data saved to the disk and decompresses data read from it on the fly .
13 The proximity of the London & North Western Railway station at Davenport , together with the easy access from it to the School , was the deciding factor between these last two .
14 In a situation where it is required to perform some task , the reaction time can be seen to include the following : ( a ) the time taken by the stimulus to activate the sense organ and for impulses to travel from it to the brain , ( b ) the central processes concerned with the identification of the signal and the response to it , and ( c ) the time required to energise the muscles and produce the correct response .
15 The plaintiff used to spread a cloth over his elephantoid scrotum and sell sweetmeats from it to the passersby .
16 He spread it out , and glanced from it to the screen .
17 For the period , a remarkable sense of town planning is shown here with the main square , the Malostranské náměstí or Lesser Town Square in the centre and , running from it to the castle , the wide Nerudova Street , and Mostecká , leading to Charles Bridge and Letenská .
18 As a matter of practice , moneys paid into the account would be transferred from it to the account in Scotland if not immediately , then certainly within a matter of days , for amalgamation with the general fund .
19 Historic Scotland has recently spelt out the service standards customers can expect from it with the publication of a new charter leaflet .
20 Crowds of spectators were thronging the sides of the narrow road which led down from it into the village and , after Vitor had hurriedly found a parking place , they joined them .
21 A well was sunk in the back garden , and water could be pumped up from it into the kitchen .
22 But the servant returned with a wineskin , and at a signal poured a liquor from it into the horn vessels .
23 Shelling , apparently from Muslim positions , also rained down on the airport , hub of the international relief airlift for the besieged capital , and closed the road leading from it into the city , UN officials said .
24 But we can not in this case take the flow of newly issued bills , or even the net flow ( new issues minus redemptions ) as the supply and learn anything useful from it about the operation of the market .
25 post-interview with the teacher to obtain his view of the lesson outcomes , including particular incidents and pupils — possibly leading on to discussion of the SCAN record and possible inferences from it about the material
26 Before turning to that geographical variability , however , and what we can learn from it about the nature of a place , a brief outline of the strike 's context is provided .
27 The reader can not have failed to notice that J. A. Fodor is fast emerging here as the bête noire , in that he both presents the strongest case for the representational theory of the mind and champions the conclusion which flows from it about the impossibility of concept-learning .
28 For example in Errington v. Minister of Health it was argued that the Minister was in breach of natural justice by conferring with the local authority and receiving further evidence from it after the dose of a public inquiry .
29 The payment is said by the respondent not to have been ‘ voluntary ’ but ‘ forced ’ from it within the contemplation of the law … ‘ compulsion ’ in relation to a payment of which refund is sort , and whether it is also variously called ‘ coercion , ’ ‘ extortion , ’ ‘ exaction ’ or ‘ force , ’ includes every species of duress or conduct analogous to duress actual or threatened , exacted by or on behalf of the payee and applied to the person or the property or any right of the person who pays … .
30 The village of Tickton in East Yorkshire is situated on the Beverley to Bridlington road about two and a half miles north-east of Beverley and separated from it by the river Hull .
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