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

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1 You have only to think how often we suffer from aches and pains when we are miserable or depressed .
2 We eat from tables .
3 When we exit from Windows , we expect it to remember our own particular setting , and it obligingly does so by saving this configuration information in a set of files which have the extension INI .
4 Reducing the resistance we encounter from objects , it suggests the possibility of unlimited success against them .
5 We greatly value the close contact we have with the Junior School prefects and the Sixth Year pupils , as well as the assistance we receive from parents in a variety of situations .
6 The few who have attempted to query appointments at a local level have been met by shocked indignation and comments like : ‘ The fact of the matter is that the applications that we receive from doctors from the subcontinent leave much to be desired . ’
7 As a result of the requests we receive from employees , we are aware that many of you give up your own time to work for charitable organisations .
8 The food we receive from plants grown upon these sterile patches is deficient in nutrient content and vibrational life energy .
9 Whatever we crave from others — love , freedom , respect , pleasure , approval , appreciation — is what we need to give ourselves .
10 But if we begin from situations in which the community does not find it necessary to impose standards , we find , in the very simplest cases , full confidence and agreement in evaluating , untroubled by worries over differences of taste .
11 The most frequent plea we hear from readers is for a no-fuss dinner-party menu .
12 ‘ But the comments we hear from wives advising their husbands what to do are great .
13 And we know from micro-fossils that there were already several distinct forms of bacteria-like organisms as long ago as 3000 million years .
14 Um , as we know from studies of re story telling , as we know from studies of memories for story structure and recall , memories for everyday events mm there 's er a substantial way in which memories are scripted , which memories um seem to fit a schemer , which memories ah are n't stored as a literal description of something but they 're something that we re-construct as we tell them .
15 Um , as we know from studies of re story telling , as we know from studies of memories for story structure and recall , memories for everyday events mm there 's er a substantial way in which memories are scripted , which memories um seem to fit a schemer , which memories ah are n't stored as a literal description of something but they 're something that we re-construct as we tell them .
16 That 's quite an interesting one , if you consider as students how do you learn erm in general you probably do n't learn that much in lectures because for example we know from experiments that we all have a limited attention span .
17 We know from records of royal instructions that these regulations were made : what the evidence of extant coins proves is that they were actually carried out .
18 In retrospect , we can see Charles as a man of immense energy ; we know from chronicles that he slept lightly and that he commenced state work very early in the morning , judging litigants in his private chamber .
19 We know from years of experience that we are not capable of reading other people 's problems as well as they are .
20 Most importantly it is also a positive response to the constant stream of enquiries we get from researchers , readers and users of the library as a whole .
21 ‘ SCOTVEC is very grateful for the feedback we get from teachers and lecturers by way of the Module Comment Form .
22 You 'll notice that instead of complaints signed in what would be technically the paragraph where they talk about service requests , because many of the requests we get from members of the public to provide a service are not necessarily complaints , but they do need our help .
23 We differ from bacteria mainly in that our cells have discrete little mini-cells inside them .
24 When we turn from LETTERS to Sabbatical ( 1982 ) , the latter seems almost to have been written to put into practice the theoretical position laid down in ‘ The Literature of Replenishment ’ .
25 It is particularly when we turn from comparisons with animals to the more characteristically human manifestations of our species that we hit the problem .
26 First of all , we feel that a step by step approach whereby we move from options to preferred option to a formal debate e on the principle erm of erm of of the strategy .
27 More and more we shrink from reminders of life before death .
28 In the fourth century , as we learn from inscriptions ( e.g. Syll. 957 ) , the ‘ defence of Eleusis ’ was the charge of detachments of the young conscripts called epheboi ; and Eleusis , Panakton and Phyle are mentioned together as the main fortresses of Attica in a hellenistic text ( Syll. 485 ) .
29 That is important , we learn from experiences .
30 But what we learn from interviews , now that Couples is enjoying a run of success that some see as likely to culminate in the Masters title , tells another tale entirely .
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