Example sentences of "and from [pron] [det] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The use of barely disguised episodes from the lives of children that she knew , and from her own childhood , was to characterize her books .
2 But his was one of the many families in the streets that ran off the main road at the bottom of the hill and from whom this shop and the tobacconist 's derived most of their regular custom .
3 Trade union education in the 1970s developed in a world of its own , cut off from many of the new developments in community-based adult education and from its own origins in the committed and politically alert work of the WEA and Labour College movement .
4 Banks such as 3i , which is the largest venture capital investor in the UK and is owned by six clearing banks and by the Bank of England , raise ‘ independent ’ funds on the market and from their own retained profits .
5 The Greeks had perfected the lintel method of spanning an opening ; the Romans adapted the arch from Etruscan designs and from their own development and thus led the way to later variations on this theme .
6 Their resources were considerable ; not only did they have vast incomes from taxation and from their own estates , but also they could expect considerable quantities of tribute from the subject peoples east of the Rhine and elsewhere .
7 Having registered , he set about ordering his life as he saw it developing , by giving himself over to the muse , by associating with those whose lives found proper space for literary reflection and endeavour , by getting close to that bohemian existence which he loved and from which all modern art seemed to spring .
8 For there is a single unifying factor of the crisis , into which all the exacerbating elements flow and from which all the symptoms of the crisis proceed ( as Figure 1.2 shows ) .
9 It provided a full and comprehensive check against dishonesty and speculation as , for example , with the existence of a single Exchequer account into which all receipts were paid and from which all payments were drawn .
10 In making manifest to a waiting public the final accomplishment of that ambitious design , Sheriff Irvine Smith has had to contend with vicissitudes of health to which he refers in his Introduction and from which all his many friends are rejoiced to see him recovered .
11 Some concessions seem harmless enough , those which nobody minds and from which many people gain enjoyment ; for example , reduced entrance fees for National Trust properties or Heritage sites .
12 The mouth is omitted and the head is surrounded by a number of peculiar , concentric bands , through which and from which many lines radiate , giving the structure the effect of a halo . ’
13 Above all , though , are the speed reductions which characterise all of the German schemes ( and from which most benefits stem ) yet which are scarcely mentioned in the British project .
14 We therefore propose to introduce a National Lottery from 1994 , which would help provide funds for a number of good causes in the artistic , sporting , heritage and charitable fields — and from which some funds would be put aside for a Millennium Fund .
15 By giving through a central fund to which all give according to their means and from which those in need receive , we fulfil our Lord 's precept : Do not let your right hand know what your left is doing .
16 It brings you first to the Lac d'Orédon , which is a genial , pine girt spot , and from which another , rather more dubious road leads off to the left up to the dam of Cap-de-Long .
17 It was a mark of the esteem in which John Burridge was held at Selhurst Park , both as a goalkeeper and as a showman , that whenever he has subsequently returned here with his later clubs he has invariably been accorded a warm welcome , both from Palace fans and from his former playing colleagues .
18 From what he was told by the Queen , by his unofficial advisers like the Dean of Westminster , and from his own conviction , Macmillan was sure that he must recommend Ramsey to the Queen .
19 Browne did so and from his own contacts within the RUC learned several pieces of information such as the fact that the Star pistol was assumed to have been in the custody of the army since the previous owner was shot a year earlier .
20 What is known of his life comes mainly from a memorial sermon preached by his friend and successor as bishop , George Rust , and from his own books .
21 His interest in drawings dates from his youth and from his own enthusiasm for drawing .
22 Edward II particularly profited from the almost unctuous service of Pope Clement V : he it was who absolved the king from Archbishop Winchelsey 's curses and from his own various oaths ; it was Clement who appointed Reynolds , the king 's chaplain and treasurer , to Worcester and translated him to Canterbury to the exclusion of the eminently qualified capitular candidate , Thomas de Cobham ; above all , Clement alleviated Edward 's poverty with papal subsidies .
23 After all , he and Nicola were lovers , and from his own experience the sergeant knew violence and passion were jealous twins .
24 In addition to his tile business , he also transfer-printed on to enamelled copper and porcelain , which he sold to other retailers and from his own shop in Harrington Street .
25 " Hello , " she said , and from his own eyes , hers flickered down to where her hand was held out to him .
26 We learn such skills from our mothers , midwives , books and from our own inner promptings , and as we use them they become absorbed into everyday life , often so much so that we no longer realize just how much we have learnt and are capable of ; in fact , we only take notice of the areas in which we feel that we fail .
27 and from our own departments , in each
28 Although it is the second aspect which concerns speechreaders , you may be interested to share some discoveries made by the 1979 study group from their own experience , and from my own experience since 1972 .
29 They are given in alphabetical order , and from my own experience I know them to be absolutely reliable .
30 Chairman I think this is probably the first time in this council chamber in twenty years that er I will probably have spoken on er social services issues er and I speak from an entirely private capacity and any information that er that comes my way is from what I might call informed members of the public erm , people who I come into contact with and from my own experiences as a ward councillor and from as we all do from time to time , my own family experience , my own domestic experiences and I do know something about the problems which are associated with the the care of elderly people er although I do n't have that problem now erm things have taken their course .
  Next page