Example sentences of "from which [pron] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Besides , my fondness for your personal graces and that genteel from which everyone admires
2 It will be a vision of success from which everyone profits , a vision which the Profitboss has developed over many years , a vision in which he passionately believes and is able to communicate with enthusiasm to his team and every other employee in the organization .
3 Do not keep saying to yourself ‘ But how can it be like that ? ’ because you will get … into a blind alley from which no-one has yet escaped . ’
4 Such things happen in bad dreams , dreams of the recurring kind from which one awakens in panic and fear , though she had never dreamed anything like this .
5 As Eugene Roosens says in Creating Ethnicity , the book which , with Frederik Barth 's Ethnic Groups I have found particularly helpful : ‘ After all , nobody can change ‘ the past ’ from which one descends , and nobody can undo who one is ’ .
6 Even if not as ancient or beautiful as the Charles Bridge , it is a lovely artefact from which one commands splendid views of the Parliament Building and of the skylines of Buda and Pest .
7 Two hours ' climbing brought us to the narrow ledge from which one entered Antony 's cave through a cleft in the cliff-face .
8 A path led up to a level terrace from which one entered the tombs .
9 The Colemans were driven to Filanta Court , on Archbishop Makarios Avenue , and handed the keys of No. 62B , a large three-bedroomed apartment with a balcony overlooking the port of Larnaca from which everybody getting on or off the ferry from Lebanon could be observed through binoculars .
10 It sustains the flow of rivers , from which we take water for drinking and many industrial uses .
11 There is a mistaken tendency , nourished perhaps by too partial examples , to see perception as the passive reception of evidence from an external world from which we make inferences to its causes .
12 From which we make a deduction and I 'll come back to that deduction in a moment if I may sir .
13 So we 've got iron ore obviously from which we get the iron .
14 But the enormous changes in the social life and industrial occupations of the vast majority of our people , changes begun in the sixteenth century and greatly accentuated by the so-called Industrial Revolution , have created a gulf between the world of poetry and that world of everyday life from which we receive our " habitual impressions " .
15 Since the awareness from which we recoil is constantly being forced on us by pain or misfortune , no doubt many or most people can take every opportunity they have to avoid the unpleasant without being in any danger of becoming more aware of the bright side than the dark .
16 I looked up the phone directory and , sure enough , there was a P.Lawn , ( luckily not a common name ! ) , from which we surmised , correctly , that Ken had died but Pat was still there .
17 But no , she was sure it was Queen Victoria , personally , who had spread this grey fog over Britain from which we 've never recovered .
18 Not to mention a massive oil crisis from which we 've never really recovered and …
19 It symbolizes our social experience and locates us with social groups from which we draw our identities .
20 Each offers slightly different and more appropriate benefits to the players , so that the individuals have a secure platform from which we hope they will make serious bids for international success .
21 In the same way , the collection of information from the classroom from which we hope to draw inferences about teaching material must be such that distorting factors due to the circumstances of collection do not invalidate its use .
22 One of the most exciting events towards the year end was the transfer of the Geotech site investigation team at Uphall to Environmental , giving us not only a stronger resource in geology and land assessment , but also a well established presence in Scotland from which we hope to offer all our other services in future .
23 seminar which is to be held a week on Saturday in Ipswich from which we hope will er quite a bit by a way of input to the forthcoming lorry management plan , thank you .
24 In practice , although this way of thinking was one perspective from which we looked at our material , it proved much less useful than we expected .
25 We found the brêche , from which we knew a steep couloir dropped to the Talefre Glacier , and started abseiling from such old slings and pegs as we could find on the sidewalls .
26 We pray for those who suffer as prisoners without trial ; for hostages , for deported people , for all victims of violence in this land and in the countries from which we come ; may they be comforted and delivered ;
27 We are not here simply in response to what has been described as the ’ West Lothian question ’ in deference to my hon. Friend the Member for Linlithgow ( Mr. Dalyell ) , When we arrive to take up our seats in the House of Commons , we are obviously strongly influenced by the constituency that we represent and the part of the country from which we come .
28 4859 ) ; Bakal is another native name , attested in a late fourth-century decree of Ptolemy I from which we derive much of our knowledge about the early hellenistic city ( SEG ix.1 , line 81 ; M. Austin ( 1981 ) The Hellenistic World , no.264 for translation , but omitting the names at the end ) .
29 The curtains have been drawn aside to reveal the female subject as she speaks , writes , paints — making and doing , in the original Greek sense of poiein , from which we derive ‘ poet ’ .
30 It was a tiny place — nothing more than a shop knocked through from the street at ground level , no more than 60 feet long At one end was a small bar — from which we sold orange juices on top of the counter with the booze tucked away underneath .
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