Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] from " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For example , in Europe Type I occurs from July until September and Type II from March to May .
2 pBLcat2 and wild type oligo I constructs from the same experiments are shown for direct comparison .
3 The entry of his feast-day in eleventh-century church calendars indicates that he became fairly widely venerated , and miracles were occurring at his tomb in St Paul 's before the translation of his remains from London to Canterbury in 1023 .
4 Your mother had an amazing imagination — that 's where yours comes from — she could have done so much better with her life …
5 ‘ You gave me orders from the poop deck .
6 Sheila E , Prince 's drummer , had already established her musician 's credentials before she joined him , though it remains to be seen where she goes from here .
7 She goes from one extreme to the other .
8 She differs from Proust , however , in dwelling on the reality and hence irredeemable transience of the past .
9 But where she differs from Miss Finlay Johnson is that she looks beyond the facts to more universal implications of any particular topic .
10 A believer in market forces , she differs from Thatcher in her interventionism , and it is a safe bet that what the French euphemistically call ‘ positive actions ’ will be brought to bear to shake the best out of the likes of Thomson .
11 In the third and highest phase of development the child understands the way in which she differs from and is interdependent with the outside world , and once again feels ‘ at home ’ in the world .
12 She differs from most of her male colleagues who want to raise the cultural profile of their city by grandiose schemes , festivals and new building projects .
13 His presence gives Joan some respite and complements the assistance she receives from the doctor who visits once a week and a nurse who comes in the morning and at night to put James to bed .
14 Protecting the environment means different things to different people , but in most cases it is the individual 's own perception of what he or she wants from the environment .
15 Somehow she has to try to extract the information she wants from the information she gets .
16 ‘ I ca n't give her what she wants from me , Mick .
17 And erm what was it she wants from Curry 's ?
18 In the latter he or she develops from the moment of birth .
19 She concludes from her study that there is strong evidence to suggest that the ward ‘ climate ’ is an important factor in the satisfaction of students with their learning environment .
20 She concludes from her study that ‘ the families of the writers were riddled with both creativity and mental illness ’ , the two intertwining to an extent which would make it difficult to deny their real association .
21 The purpose of this interview will be to assess the elderly person 's financial needs , the income she has from all sources , and her capital ( if any ) , and to establish whether she is entitled to receive a supplementary pension or allowance .
22 ‘ Suzie 's always been more amenable to advice from men than she has from her own sex .
23 She has from day one showed her disdain for me as one opposed to hypocrisy and her type of esoteric or pseudo intellectuality — being satisfied as I am with intelligence , integrity and interest ( ! ) — and has manifestly made it clear she overtly dislikes me because I wo n't be moulded or do what she wants or tells me — she suffers the matriarch/ bossy syndrome ( childhood nickname I am told was ) and does not like the fact I am utterly my own forthright person who spoils the incestuous sibling smythe-watson quartet which she ‘ ran ’ so self-interestedly for so long …
24 From time to time , she pauses from her work to comfort him .
25 If you removed all the he saids and she saids from the writing above you would still know who was saying what because Nicolas and Bridget are doing different things .
26 She originates from Coimbra in Portugal where she obtained a Masters Degree in Germanic Studies .
27 Well she lived down there , but she originates from Derbyshire , .
28 Jane Austen may seem in Sense and Sensibility to join with Edward in preferring cottages in good repair , even at the cost of the picturesque ; but on another occasion , in Northanger Abbey , she appears to side with Catherine , who is so delighted by the view of ‘ a sweet little cottage ’ among apple trees which she sees from the windows of the parsonage at Woodston that her enthusiasm even saves it from demolition .
29 But I am prepared to accept that her delusions of grandeur are a form of psychosis connected with ageing and that her refusal to consider retirement springs from an awareness that it is she , not the country , who is in danger of falling to bits is she desists from hyper-activity .
30 She suffers from arthritis in her hip which keeps her confined to her home in the town of Maesteg .
  Next page