Example sentences of "from [det] [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 and from that it ca n't be bad can it ?
2 Apart from that it could have been any accident on an urban road .
3 I suppose conversely from that you might construe then that the person least likely to vote would be a black female working class tenant .
4 No it 's er the initial the initial report that 's gone back has said that you 're gon na have a bad knee very shortly but apart from that you 'll be inflicted with some physical injury .
5 Obviously you do n't choose mighty oaks or plants that need many square feet of space , but apart from that you can grown trees , shrubs , perennials , annuals , cacti — in fact anything .
6 Sorry One of the other tables you 've got shows you a comparison between the elements which are present in crustal rock and in the sea and from that you can see which ones are a good reflection , I E whi which elements have been transferred to the sea by direct weathering , and which of them are undergoing other processes , either other sources or other sinks .
7 And having measured the alkalinity you can simply convert back to work out the concentrations of the carbonate and bicarbonate ions and from that you can calculate the P H using that relationship .
8 Apart from that you can get on weekly ca n't you there ?
9 Yeah and er you know we can do a certain amount but I think if you went away from that you can go away from it a little bit but I think if you went too much away the people that you have and and our audience when we 've got them you know , they tend to stay with us you know they do n't change like the the youngsters and when we started off first you know our audience were mainly over forty five fifty plus really and now they 're down to we 're getting you know loads of of people in their twenties and in their teens and even down to kids like last night , five and six years old .
10 If you 're normal you wo n't have enjoyed this book much ( ! ) — but apart from that you will also continue to get things wrong occasionally .
11 From that you will develop a training strategy and then be responsible for deciding how to implement that strategy .
12 So what you could do , you could see the defence , and then from that you could work backwards , to the motive of the defence .
13 I infer from that he may have had reasons other than professional ones for taking on the employment you offered him .
14 Apart from that he would be in touch by telephone . ’
15 From that he could deduce the centre of mass for the entire animal , the point through which its forces act .
16 From each you can get a good idea of what police work in the respective countries is really like .
17 ‘ With help from another I might have survived .
18 From this they would graduate to reading and summarising the records of past negotiations and finally to preparing detailed memoranda on various aspects of French foreign policy .
19 From this they could create a map of the Viking world , using different symbols for settlement , raiding , trading activities , exploration , etc .
20 Judging from this we might be missing entertainment if not instruction .
21 We at the at the initia erm the initial opening as well we 've we would er er offer an invitation to the press and the media to attend our launch meeting er from from this we would hopefully get some advertising in as much as apply to erm and er hope t to get X amount of the market .
22 From this we may conclude that the ‘ at least ’ sense of numerals is not established .
23 Only John took the ‘ poorter 's oath ’ necessary for those who wanted to establish a business , and from this we may surmise that James Champneys lived with John and Jane and that the business was solely in John 's name .
24 From this we can see that the only pieces that can be affected by the commutator [ F , R ] are those which are in the overlap or are moved into the overlap by F or R .
25 Quite apart from this we can show that MCE is not performed consistently or accurately enough to provide effective codes even in this unimodal situation .
26 This suggests that the effects of the renewal of LSW in the early 1970s have just reached the Rockall Trough , and from this we can deduce that there is a circulation time of 18–19 years between the Labrador Sea and the Rockall Trough .
27 From this we can infer that the proportion of useful information obtained by expansion to the second level is less than that available at the first level .
28 From this we can derive a right angled triangle , ABC , whose sides are determined by the thickness and diameter of the blank and radius of the circle we want to find .
29 From this we can learn two other things .
30 From this we can go on to discover one of the rules for this sort of crime fiction .
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