Example sentences of "[adv] the [noun] have [verb] from " in BNC.
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1 | There have always been good maths teachers who 've made maths interesting and relevant to the children , but I think perhaps the emphasis has shifted from rote learning to helping children to understand what they 're doing . |
2 | So the memory has passed from a disordered state to an ordered one . |
3 | Only the truth had passed from Timothy Gedge , the unarguable strength of it , the power and the glory of it . |
4 | Er there would have been some cases where that had happened erm and clearly the nationalists had withdrawn from most of southern China into , into south west China and therefore erm th th there 'd been er and there was quite a lot of fighting going , still going across south China so i it 's not quite the same . |
5 | She recalled how she had steadied the block with one hand while pulling at the handle with the other , and how smoothly the blade had slid from its slot . |
6 | That would be the normal price bracket for a Dior or Chanel creation — but now the supermodels have gone from catwalk to catalogue . |
7 | Now the light had faded from those eyes , and her complexion was sallow . |
8 | The passage of the Riot Act of 1715 , which made assembling for political ( as well as other ) purposes potentially a capital offence , reveals how far the Whigs had come from the early days when they had actively promoted political demonstrations and deliberately sought an alliance with " the crowd " . |
9 | Many people thought the scheme would n't work , but since then the company has gone from strength to strength . |
10 | Since then the market has grown from £12m to more than £230m , according to industry estimates . |
11 | At first it had seemed he was only there to sit out the war with his French woman , but then the summons had come from the Dutch army and Isabella had known that her husband would follow Sharpe . |
12 | Reviewer W.R. Anderson attended the Dohnányi sessions , and recalled how the composer had darted from keyboard to rostrum while supervising the performance . |
13 | He heard the cry and looked back , seeing how the blood had drained from Ling 's face , then let the body fall from him . |
14 | She did n't know where the question had come from . |
15 | ‘ You gave her roses , ’ she whispered , hardly knowing where the thought had come from . |
16 | He wondered where the boy had come from . |
17 | Yet Leicestershire also has many parishes where the village has disappeared from the landscape , leaving perhaps only the manor house or squire 's hall and sometimes a forlorn and decaying church . |
18 | Nigel explained later that the bridge was where the water had descended from the millpond onto the wheel , which sadly was no more . |
19 | Now , watching his grinning monkey face as he swung , arm over arm , the frantic twisting of his body , the silver of the delicate ribcage under the pale flesh where the jacket had parted from his jeans , she felt a surge of love so painful that it was like a thrust to the heart . |
20 | At Maidstone , where the company had moved from Reading , a maid-servant had seen Drew frantically trying to remove a stain from his jacket ; the operation had taken half an hour . |
21 | There are all sorts of people involved and the various underground factions , that maybe that one has , er as , probably as an afterthought er considered that , that maybe money in the release of any Western hostages , that may be where the story has come from , but certainly from the informed sources , and the , the , er certainly on the evidence of past hostages releases , er we would n't really have expected that er ransom would be demanded , obviously we have to wait and see when er , when the hostages are set free . |
22 | No one knew where the money had come from . |
23 | Those of us in public life are aware that , whenever complaints of poor service come before us , there are always Labout Members who will blame either the absence of public funds , although they never make any reference to where the money has to come from , or the Government . |
24 | Daly won his bet — and the answer to the first quiz was where the word had come from . |
25 | Isabel felt herself blushing , but either fitzAlan took pity on her or his arm was hurting too much , for he made no comment on where the bandage had come from . |
26 | You know they joined it right at the beginning , they , they 're the ones where the momentum 's come from erm they 're the ones asking the rich peasants to join them , the middle peasants and they 're the ones leading the revolution , th they are the riff-raff if you , you know , want to take one view erm they have n't got anything to lose because of their position er er er er as erm a rich peasant may say , you know , what is there to keep me from joining yo you people have neither tile over your heads nor speck of land under your feet , and it 's true they have got nothing to lose but these are the ones that are pushing the ideas forward and forming the associations . |
27 | We drove out of the city on the now four-laned highway , passing the airport and driving over the bridge where I silently saluted the ancient tower standing in the tide-water below , the place where the Sheikha had fallen from her camel . |
28 | The former Coleraine and Portadown midfielder refuses to divulge where the enquiries have come from . |
29 | And in Bardera , where the population has swelled from 10,000 to 60,000 as the hungry arrive in search of food , huge sacks of maize and cereal are reaching thousands more . |
30 | At the time , the proposal was plausible although , of course , it still ducked the issue of where the spores had come from in the first place . |