Example sentences of "we [vb base] from [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It is quite amazing how much the human eye actually misses when we walk from place to place .
2 We meet from day to day .
3 Erm I would like to take advantage of the things that I have actually done myself as a member of the Stansted Airport Consultative Committee and also as a member of Advisory Committee because I am Stansted representative and we meet from time to time and as apart from transport .
4 Perhaps all one can really say about layout , in this sense , is that you have to remember that in Europe and America we read from left to right and top to bottom , in that order .
5 But we glimpse from time to time those considerations at work when courts examine the insurance position of the parties and reflect upon the implications of unlimited liability to an indeterminate number of plaintiffs .
6 But since we have failed to produce a clear notion of context , what we include in context is likely to be whatever we exclude from semantics in the way of meaning relations .
7 It gathers up the movement of the house as we pass from kitchen to living room or dining room , or kitchen to bedrooms .
8 surprising proposition is not merely that pastoral peoples do in fact show a fastidiousness with regard to the excremental functions which is totally unknown among primeval hunter-gatherers and rarely seen among agriculturalists ( although in their case the situation is complicated by subsequent introduction of domesticated animals ) , but that toilet-training and the mastery of the anal sphincter is , as we know from observation of our own children , intimately involved with sadistic instinctual trends and consists in the child accepting self-censorship of his anal and excremental drives .
9 As we know from time to time but not in time .
10 The only thing that changes is our bodily condition , soul comes into the body and we go from birth to death , and how I look at it is that death is like taking your suit off .
11 If we go from left to right along a row of p-block elements , the effect of increasing mass is outweighed by the increasing bond strength , and frequencies increase ( see Table 5.7 ) .
12 Although we do not everywhere have the precision of Mesozoic chronology , we do from time to time find evidence , in all parts of the stratigraphical column , of very rapid and very spasmodic deposition in the most harmless of sediments .
13 So we move from semantics to pragmatics , from virtual to actual meaning .
14 We move from place to place in shoals . ’
15 We move from house to house for a glass of sherry and a chat .
16 These examples must be multicultural , if they are intended to show the universal nature of mathematics , and should also demonstrate how we move from reality to abstraction and back again .
17 There is a strong tradition in philosophy which holds that we start from knowledge of our own sensory states and build up from there .
18 This was Hardy 's conception also , as we see from poem after poem and story after story .
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