Example sentences of "[det] [noun sg] from [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 You 'll get little change from £40,000 for the 300SE , the 500SE is expected to sell for around £60,000 while the flagship 600SEL ( the short wheelbase model wo n't be sold in Britain ) is expected to be close to £80,000 — £22,500 more than the rival 750iL BMW .
2 Fact File Hook of Holland Ferries : Sealink ( 0233 47047 ) has two sailings a day in each direction from Harwich to the Hook , crossing time around seven hours ; a 53-hour return for a car and two adults costs from £77 .
3 The British Youth Peace Assembly , a largely Communist gathering , was held in March 1936 , and attracted some support from branches of the Labour League of Youth and from the University Labour Federation .
4 But they still received some protection from folk like the English kings who found profit in them , and especially from William Rufus , who seems quite sincerely to have disliked the Church 's intolerance ; and the Church itself strongly condemned violent persecution .
5 Another facoured delivery system , or vector , is adenovirus : this is a bit bigger , and enters the cell via specific receptors that seem to provide some protection from breakdown of the nucleic acid once inside the human cell .
6 As I have tried to show , the significance for our culture of humanist transgression , this escape from repression into the affirmation of one 's true self can hardly be overestimated .
7 This move from nominalism about the extra-mental to nominalism about mental acts can be seen in the development from Descartes to Locke and Berkeley , or , perhaps , in the contrast between such continental rationalists as Descartes , Malebranche and Leibnitz on the one hand , and British philosophers from Bacon and Hobbes on the other .
8 Fothergill and Gudgin ( 1979 ) demonstrated this pattern from data for the period 1959 to 1975 .
9 But this flight from objects into the land of predicates really solves nothing , for the problem of " ontological commitment " soon reappears in a new guise .
10 You do get some relief from failure of the PC 's own power converter .
11 She believes he bought this property from Durance with the sole purpose of turning out the others .
12 Rabbits were introduced to this country from France in the twelfth century .
13 The little circlets of flat ‘ leaves ’ born at regular intervals on the jointed stems serve to distinguish this plant from others in the Carboniferous coal-shales. 8 cm long .
14 An important centre in the Middle Ages was the Island of Gotland , regained by Sweden at this time from control by the Hanseatic League .
15 Baker , despite his 17 goals , has taken some flak from fans at the Victoria Ground .
16 The county court owes its establishment to the cost and complexity of civil procedure , which persuaded the government of the day to pass the County Courts Act 1846 against much opposition from parts of the legal profession .
17 Was it I mean was there w I mean wit with regard to custom , Did you get much custom Have you had much custom from people in the flats ?
18 For handwriting , the writer and reader are apart and so there is much less support from context in the signal .
19 Second half I was expecting to see a lot more action from Leeds at the Leeds fans end part of the ground .
20 Other runners waved , but there was no more reaction from pedestrians to the eccentric prospect we must present than there is in Britain .
21 Half-time — Linfield 0 Cliftonville 1 More pressure from Linfield at the start of the second half .
22 They were of special interest to Mr Dalyell as he had been attempting to get more information from ministers about the sinking of the General Belgrano .
23 Only the British Gas sale , which attracted 4.5million applications from small investors , and BAA with 2.5million applications , attracted more interest from members of the public .
24 Rose-Marie , part owner of the Right and Wrong Restaurant , was a former model from Toulon in the south of France .
25 Held , granting the application , that the Act of 1987 placed the Bank of England under a wide public duty to supervise deposit-taking businesses , the fulfilment of which often required it to take urgent action in the interests of those whom the Act was designed to protect ; that a notice from the Bank of England under section 39(3) ( a ) of the Act of 1987 requiring production of documents overrode an injunction restraining that bank from disclosure of the documents to a third party , and the existence of an injunction did not constitute a reasonable excuse under section 39(11) for failure to comply with the section 39 notice ; and that the injunction should not , in any event , be interpreted as prohibiting compliance with the notice ; that it was proper for such a notice to specify the documents to which it applied by class rather than individually ; and that , accordingly , the defendants should be directed to comply with the notice ( post , pp. 717G–H , 718C , 719B–C , 721C , 722C ) .
26 There was that letter from Walter in the archive at Jackson 's , dated 2 June 1939 .
27 To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what steps he is taking to ensure that known international terrorists do not receive any support from countries in the middle east with which the United Kingdom maintains diplomatic relations .
28 Erm but I certainly never felt under any threat or any danger from people in the flats .
29 But , even then , it may fail and it should again be emphasised that family members benefit from their own sake from involvement in the Family Fellowships regardless of what may happen to the primary sufferer .
30 Excess vegetable matter can be usefully kept in a separate waste-bin to form a compost which will keep garden and flowers in a good healthy condition — help and information on making your own compost from Friends of the Earth , Bradbury Buildings , Bradbury Place , Belfast 7 or telephone ( 0232 ) 311555 .
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