Example sentences of "n't [vb pp] from [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ We have n't heard from Peter today , ’ Marc pointed out after the conversation eventually veered away from theatrical things . |
2 | have n't heard from Bristol |
3 | that clock 's a bit fast then plenty of jam , do n't like to skimp , have n't seen grandma , have n't heard from grandma today |
4 | I have n't heard from Tasha again , though I have left several messages . |
5 | Nigel had n't heard from Eleanor for several weeks . |
6 | Cos I think now we have n't heard from Mr and I think that means he 's not prepared to take it so he 's not bothered about coming . |
7 | Is it because I am consumed with envy when I pass the Woodborough bookshop , and there is Eleanor 's newest novel in a special display , and with resentment because I have n't heard from Mary for over a year because she is so busy now , commuting to Brussels being a Euro-lawyer ? |
8 | ‘ Perhaps that 's why I have n't heard from Richard today . ’ |
9 | She has n't heard from York she 's heard from Leicester |
10 | This is Lawrence 's , er Lawrence seven overs , nought to thirty-four and we have n't seen from Lewis yet . |
11 | The women knew too much ; they were n't protected from ugliness and squalor . |
12 | I have n't recovered from Humphrey yet . |
13 | But should n't I do better work if I were n't driven from pillar to post to supplement my salary ? |
14 | Sharks in general are n't flattened from side to side as free-swimming bony fish like herrings are . |
15 | After a review both the trade and Customs accept that the current legal framework continues to provide a broadly satisfactory distinction between categories that are and are n't excluded from zero-rating for food , Customs said — even though originally there was concern over confusion about the correct interpretation of food products ‘ obtained by the swelling of cereals ’ . |