Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [adv prt] from the " in BNC.

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1 I was going to make the minutes up from the tape you see .
2 John will play his part shouting the lads on from the bench .
3 To complete the back of the chair it only remains to insert the three vertical splats , once again marking the shoulders off from the upper and lower back rail .
4 Picking the feet out from the same side can save valuable seconds .
5 Right from the kick-off Hove took the game to Haslemere and only excellent defence held the visitors back from the line .
6 He was expected to get the crosses in from the left and get back to cover the left of defence .
7 They had brought most of the pieces up from the harbour defences , not anticipating another seaborne assault meantime .
8 " I 've pulled the teams around from the yard plenty of times .
9 They should get out and cut the trees back from the lines so they do n't have the problem .
10 ‘ A number of local residents commented that there was already a disproportionate ratio of pigs to people in the locality and although proposals to extend the operation would have led to some improvement , in that a new farrowing house would have been built to bring the pigs in from the old farm buildings , in fact the larger pig population would increase the scope for offensive odours to permeate the village . ’
11 The aim , Basson alleged , was to split the Zulus off from the ANC , which was substantially supported by South Africa 's other major tribe , the Xhosa , and ultimately to ensure that eventual multiracial elections were won by an alliance of Inkatha and others regarded by the SADF as " moderates " .
12 Wearing the spots off from the inside ,
13 ‘ Last year , ’ he added , ‘ accountants advised us to let the station fold and buy the bits back from the receiver .
14 From London , they did the poles up from the Lyness up to the hill .
15 Bob was taken round the various barns which held the winter fodder and together he and George rode the most advantageous trails , which would get the ewes down from the heights most speedily .
16 ‘ Last Christmas they brought the children over from the nursery school .
17 He smiled , seeing it ahead of him ; imagining Beth there in the low-beamed living room , the fire lit and the curtains drawn ; seeing her , as he had so often seen her , go to the back door and call the children in from the meadow .
18 After bringing the horses in from the fields and putting feed in the stables for them , his next task was to bring all the sheep in close to the farm .
19 THE runners up from the narrowly defeated Potting A team are , back row , left to right , Mike Walklate , John Orlowski and Steve Majers , and front row , left , Steve Nixon and goalkeeper Lee Mason .
20 Jannie pulled another of the chairs out from the table and sat down .
21 when we got the letters back from the Secretary of State one of his excuses if you like , for imposing such a savage tax was that it was save fuel and help the environment .
22 So it 's absolutely essential that we do go forward formally and take up all the issues in relation to the minimum achieved performance levels and the scheme arising from the consolidation of the effects of last year 's pay settlement , but as er most of the delegates from British Gas will know , I 've been er ensuring that we first of all get all of the reports in from the regional joint indu regional joint trade union secretaries to ensure that we have as much information for once as British Gas has , about what 's going on within the company , and secondly we 've had er full debates on the trade union side to ensure we were well aware of just exactly what our recollections were of what happened last year and to ensure we 're going forward in a clear and a positive way .
23 Slice the figs through from the stem end almost to the bottom , and again , resulting in each fruit opened like a flower into four ‘ petals ’ .
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