Example sentences of "from [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 If the fine art area is too specialised , there is a huge range of companies to choose from for a broader appeal as the accompanying directory shows .
2 The dilemma is where does the money come from for the other essential things , especially food .
3 Even without a new signing Keegan still has an embarrassment of players to chose from for the vital Brighton clash .
4 The visiting shooter hit excellent from during the second quarter , but so did Hawtin and Talbot in the third and Ants had edged into a 24–21 lead at the start of the last quarter .
5 On pages 146–150 , there is a selection of desserts you can choose from during the four weeks of Stage I.
6 ‘ Room service , ’ said the waiter , glancing down at the tip of the silencer he could see pointed at him from through the white cloth covering the lower part of the trolley .
7 ( Note : if your equipment has synchro-edit , you will be able to release the machines from off the one button . )
8 If more than one edited copy tape is required , the extra copies can easily be produced from off the original recordings and not as third-generation copies off a second-generation edited master — with obvious advantages in terms of picture quality .
9 This could either be taken from an effects record , or you could transfer some real location sound from off the original video recording .
10 Who steals the goose from off the Common ;
11 To end the list prematurely and clarify the point , the law of theft includes , in the words of that anonymous poet particularly loved by teachers of ‘ A ’ level economic history , ‘ the man or woman who steals the goose from off the common , but leaves the greater villain loose who steals the common from the goose ’ .
12 They were not really in control , apart from about a 5 minute spell where their passes did all seem be to controlled .
13 Collision along what is now the Indus-Tsangpo suture zone seems to have occurred from about the Late Paleocene until the Early Eocene , or possibly a little later .
14 They display linear troughs , sets of parallel ridges and troughs , and numerous roughly circular features from about the lower size limit of 30 km across up to about 1700 km across .
15 The centrepiece of this sale of Antiquities is a Graeco-Roman bronze statuette of Harpocrates dating from about the first century BC , which is estimated to go for £150–200,000 ( $270–360,000 ) .
16 it is clear from the statement of claim that the er plaintiffs retained the defendants from about the ninth of September to act in relation to the purchase of this wine bar which was then known as er the plaintiffs were obtaining finance from the National Westminster Bank in order to purchase this business and the plaintiff Mr had been engaged in long standing discussions with his bank from the earlier part of nineteen eighty five with a view to er agreeing financing facilities for the purchase of the various opportunities that preven present themselves and er he will say and that he makes clear in his witness statement erm that he certainly had understood that from these negotiations the National Westminster Bank were prepared to provide the financing that he required to run this business .
17 As the baby grows up , 24-hour rhythms begin to appear from about the second month of life onwards .
18 The earliest known whales date from about the same time , but in this case the situation is slightly more complicated , in that these early whales were very similar to modern ones , and could be big — up to 15 m ( 50 ft ) long .
19 From about the same time onwards , Catholic books and pious objects began to be used more sparingly — or at least more discreetly — in most parts of the country .
20 Next , from about the same distance above the bud , begin a curving cut to pass behind the bud and clear of the embryo to meet the cut below — the bud shield should come away quite cleanly , still with its little handle .
21 Anthropologists have continued to employ participant observation as their major method of data collection up to the present day but , from about the 1930s onwards , sociology and anthropology grew further and further apart .
22 From about the twelfth century and until the Council , every priest was expected to say Mass separately each day .
23 There are hints that in the country there was a higher survival rate from about the 1470s , but in Bristol and Worcester it appears that there was no marked population increase until about 1510 ( 59 ; 75 , pp.28–9 ) .
24 In school A from about the third form ( as the headmaster pointed out ) black pupils became aware of negative attitudes they felt that the school held towards them .
25 From about the mid-1870s the YMCA made a conscious effort to recruit more adolescent and working-class members , and extended its interests to include additional recreational and sporting facilities .
26 From about the fourteenth century lay artists became more prominent , sometimes travelling and sometimes settled in urban workshops near wealthy patrons .
27 The new methods of European co-operation will prove increasingly relevant and useful in the enlargement of the Community , which will carry on apace from about the mid-1990s and — this has not yet been mentioned in the debate — in the awakening of public opinion in France and Germany where they are beginning to realise some of the implications of what their political leaders have signed .
28 ‘ The month began quietly , but things really began to move from about the 10th onwards , and in terms of takings we recorded a couple of record days .
29 The earl had sat well back from between the bristling champions , absolving himself from all responsibility here except to keep the peace and harmony of his hall .
30 The boys and their uneasy pastor were moving tidily enough into the first green enclosure which must be the frigidarium of the baths , emerging in little , bulbous groups from between the broken walls of the entrance .
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