Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [verb] [adv prt] from [art] " in BNC.

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1 Instead , they must now battle back from a 2-1 deficit after he punched the Glasgow club 's equaliser into his own net in the first leg of the all-British second round tie .
2 The human will could not stand back from the Great Battle raging in its own soul as well as in the world at large : it had to choose to contend either for God or the Devil .
3 I could see by the light of his torch that the cave was deep and spacious ; I could not make out from the beam of light its total dimensions , but clearly a man would have had no problem stretching out to sleep there .
4 The movies succeeded because people could just walk in from the streets but from the beginning everything was done to ensure that as many people as possible were brought in .
5 She 'd just come back from a visit home to Germany and was still sad .
6 Dana Gillespie : ‘ I 'd just come back from the States and was hanging around with a band called Ashton Gardner and Dyke .
7 I would often hear from my assistant who now looks after Cher , but at that time was delegated to looking after me , and she would say that she 'd just come back from the MainMan offices and the main office door was closed into DeFries 's inner sanctum and there were raised voices between him and David in there .
8 One day , on his way to do the ploughing , he met a man who 'd just come back from the south and had passed several flocks of sheep on the other side of Chhakuri Lekh .
9 Once intimate told me : ‘ Now he 'd just come back from the ‘ A ’ tour and his confidence was sky-high when he learned , at second hand as far as I know , that Matthew was going to be vice-captain .
10 He 'd just come in from a trip with a customer on one of the yachts .
11 The Superintendent had gone off duty , but Sergeant Burgess was there , and an Inspector who 'd just come in from a river patrol .
12 I 'd just come in from the garden and kicked my wellies off when it happened . ’
13 Wednesday , I 'd got Michael outside in the pushchair , coat on and I think I 'd just come down from the loo and I saw the car pull up I quickly ran and got me coat on oh I , I 'll come with you she said , so she come shopping with me .
14 For a moment I wondered if she 'd fully come round from the carbon monoxide .
15 These were a valuable indicator , as they would only show up from a distance if you were ‘ on the line ’ .
16 But so many would not come back from the war .
17 The hon. Member for Gateshead , East looks doubtful , but in a debate in the other place yesterday , Baroness Hollis of Higham said : ’ Thirdly I suggest that a few functions would appropriately come up from the county councils . ’
18 If it ca n't get out from the surface of the skin then it goes underneath and gets these great lumps which are very poisonous .
19 Langdon went on to outline a scheme whereby Kim Ku could set up a governing commission , which would subsequently take over from the military government .
20 REUTERS is to make early payment of its 1992 final dividend so shareholders will not lose out from the new tax arrangements introduced in the Budget .
21 But I will not look up from the tray until I have it safely landed on the white plastic table .
22 The rain will gradually die down from the west , to leave only a few showers in the south-east by the end of the day .
23 This is to help people whose minds wo n't switch off from the events of the day .
24 They consider that you can only move on from an unhappy experience if you have given it some meaning .
25 It can not climb back from a vertical drop since it lacks the body diameter of the rabbit .
26 You can easily change back from an improper fraction to a mixed number by dividing the denominator into the numerator and putting the remainder over the denominator .
27 Free electrons can therefore flow in from the atmosphere and the earth , thus producing electrical phenomena .
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