Example sentences of "through from the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Then Irvine broke through from the halfway line to make the score 3–3 .
2 In the shadows its gold rim funnelled darkness through from the black night of meanings .
3 For the bridge Encore have used rosewood , with the strings fixed through from the rear edge .
4 It was Thursday 5 September and he was about to leave his office to drive to Bramshill Police College to begin a series of lectures to the Senior Command Course when the call came through from the private office .
5 I do n't know who 's got through from the other games , but we 'll take anyone on really I think .
6 Fearing a tragedy of epic proportions — her mind leapt at once to Penini and then to Miss Arabel — she knocked on the open door and Mr Browning came through from the other room , so haggard and drawn in contrast to his morning self that once more she was convinced something dreadful had happened .
7 Then , two minutes before the end of the game , the news came through from the other ground that Sunderland had lost .
8 There was one obvious difference : she was coming through from the Other Side .
9 A presence forcing its way through from the Other Side .
10 Prost , starting from a record seventh successive pole position at the start of a season , was beaten off the grid by Hill in a startling getaway which also saw the two Ferraris of Berger and Jean Alesi of France surge through from the third row to take third and fourth places .
11 This is pulled through from the tufted end , a technique particularly useful for vending machine parts and similar to that used for cleaning rifles .
12 But it 's , it 's , it 's it sort a it 's , I think carrying through from the old borough days
13 He flattered himself that he was in some small part responsible for such blissful bizarrities , given that over the years he 'd brought all manner of influences through from the Succulent Rock .
14 Some nativist elements in the host community were critical of what they saw as an assault on local culture by alien Jewish values and it was this ethnocentric attitude to change , when allied to the existence of genuine social grievances , which was to make some parts of the East End a fertile reception area for racial populist and anti-immigrant movements right through from the British Brothers League in 1900 , the BUF from 1936 to 1940 , the League of Ex-Servicemen and the Union Movement in the 1940s , to the National Front in the 1970s .
15 In recent years the evidence for the health benefits of fibre , or ‘ roughage ’ as it used to be called , has grown so strong that it has filtered through from the medical journals and is now well known to the British and American public .
16 The County Council took into account a wide range of considerations , in including the the information that came through from the local plan authorities , in the preparation of their local plans over the past ten years or more .
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