Example sentences of "'ve [vb pp] from [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm hoping that maybe I 'll be able to re-sub then , but I 've heard from other students that the Uni are n't too keen on users using JANET and INTERNET and so on .
2 Now we 've heard from another reader that his solicitor managed to ‘ discover ’ a copy of a standard form GTS 21/2 190582 the AAIB use to report to the CAA .
3 For more than a century , they 've come from far and wide to Tenbury Wells for the pre Christmas auction of holly , mistletoe and wreaths .
4 Cos I 've come from higher class to the low lower class .
5 They 're standard army ammunition , but not necessarily issued to the British Army — again , the Ministry of Defence should be able to tell you if they 've come from some British Army depot or not .
6 They 've come from next door got ta be they 've bor , burrowed down a ha , another
7 And the West Midlands for four or five surveys we 've seen strong total orders broadly based between se sectors , strong output trends so the West Midlands being our leading er region is consistent with what we 've seen from other surveys .
8 This is the second machine I 've seen from Western Systems .
9 As soon as we 'd packed all the stuff in the ba van we 'd have the rest of the sandwiches the rest of the coffee or another cup of coffee and then we 'd get on the road and even if we 'd got back for four , by the time we 'd got home and , and had something to eat or if we did n't want nothing to eat , watched the telly for half an hour and get to bed , you 've got from eleven till sort of three or four the next day which is just nice because you 're in your own home
10 We , the people who 'll have the next generation of children , we want a better world than the one we 've got from all of you !
11 Right , but let's say that you 're not prepared to pop back , let's say that you 're sitting there and you 've got from that point , you want , you no want to go to the house , right , now you 're not you 're not gon na treat as a twenty minute call back , let's kill that for a minute
12 So I mean I think what we envisaged though was that the local publicity group erm would meet and see if the well first of all I suppose was there a , a necessity having seen what we 've got from national level er necessity to produce a kind of newsletter , a joint unison newsletter specific to Northumberland , that 's what the group was going to have a look at was n't it ?
13 So all the rhetoric that we 've had from this government about better performance N H S , more people being seen by the N H S , that must be read against the fact that over a million people are , or a million patients , are er waiting on N H S waiting lists .
14 We 've had a good living out of it but if that same system has brought them on their feet , you know and built them nice homes er right they 've delved into Company 's House now , all the dirty water not dirty water all the whatsit has come up how much they 've drawn from these quarries .
15 I 've escaped from many places with this … ’
16 He said : ‘ I 'm here to learn about the situation on the ground beyond things that I 've known from previous trips and a long-term study of the issues .
17 They were once found almost everywhere in Britain , but pollution of our rivers and the destruction of the otter 's natural habitat has meant that they 've disappeared from many parts .
18 They 'll be back when we 've recovered from this one ( unless , of course , there 's another election in May . )
19 Erm most have , in fact most of which is er b er seventy four additional heads were put on in March , so we 've gone from seventeen twenty three to seventeen ninety seven erm and Mick accounted for most of those with forty four .
20 So we 've gone from six million in nineteen fifteen to three hundred million in nineteen thirty seven to two billion in nineteen fifty .
21 Can I just clarify , what , what you 're saying is that in a sense there is this overall aim of getting through to socialism but the means of getting there have now changed so that we 've gone from absolute egalitarianism , which is , is an immediate step tow towards socialism you 've gone away from that and the position is now to create a rich peasant economy in order to industrialize , in order to get through to collectivization , I E into socialism .
22 You might be able to do the odd one but I do n't think that you 've got the time , I mean bear in mind you 've gone from four to three to two there 's two of you now supervising all of us if you tell me you 've got spare time then great , and you want to do one or two equally great , however unless you tell me to the contrary
23 Mine I 've got two , I 've gone from one side of the wagon to the other
24 It has n't escaped my notice that you 've gone from five-star hotels to virtual slums .
25 They 've gone from three thousand down to eight hundred and th they 've actually recruited five !
26 Why is there , I 've assumed from that , there is a need for more contract hire for the officers .
27 ‘ I was disappointed with how I handled and managed certain situations , but I know I 've learned from that and I 'm better for it . ’
28 ‘ Because I 've learned from bitter experience precisely what you 're capable of .
29 Try to remember the things you 've learned from this poem until you do the next exercise when you will have the opportunity to transform the knowledge into something uniquely your own .
30 ‘ It comes down to applying a judgement based on the background knowledge we 've acquired from 30 years of monitoring and reporting human rights ’ .
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