Example sentences of "[am/are] [adv] [vb pp] [adv prt] from " in BNC.
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1 | There are one or two passably funny lines which fail to make up a coherent , witty whole but are suddenly shot out from an invisible pea-shooter as if whipped from Ms Rudner 's stand-up routine . |
2 | There 's a great deal of double counting that takes place , it might be that some honourable members in this house actually appear upon two registers , one in London and one within the area in which they reside , normally within their constituency and many people are merely carried over from past registers , without any serious canvassing taking place to find out whether they are the people to be on the registers or whether someone else should be put in their place . |
3 | To Sulentic 's surprise , he has also found that the connection can be traced right into the central nucleus of NGC 43 19 — very much as we might expect if , as Arp has often suggested , high redshift objects are somehow shot out from the centres of otherwise normal galaxies . |
4 | Expatriates ' salaries are generally built up from a number of separate elements starting with basic salary . |
5 | It has also helped write rules for community cable access and worked to ensure that the poor are not cut off from the benefits of new telephone technologies . |
6 | Lots of people talk surface dribblings most of the time simply because they 're not teased out from under their brain-covers often enough by other people . |
7 | Some fruit trees are still dug up from the nursery in autumn and sold with their roots bare . |
8 | Attitudes are still read off from attributes . |
9 | Whole blocks are still burned out from serious rioting in 1977 . |
10 | When our unforgiveness cuts us off from our brother we are automatically cut off from God . |
11 | In both Milton and Virgil the first two books are clearly separated off from what follows ; Wordsworth begins a new theme with Book iii , and also observes the traditional break at the end of Book vi , the halfway point of the poem . |
12 | Frequently ethnicity is maintained or even heightened by physical or political conditions ; for example , ethnic minorities of Commonwealth origin in Britain are clearly marked out from the indigenous population by skin colour . |
13 | Changes are also carried out from above , if at all ( Bettelheim 1978 ) . |
14 | Our inner responses to conflict are often dredged up from deep and sometimes murky wells within us . |
15 | Swords are often passed down from father to son , and may be extremely ancient family heirlooms that have drawn blood in thousands of battles . |
16 | Another frequent problem is that brood mares are often brought in from the paddock about a month before the horse is due to foal , and are put in a little paddock next to the owner 's house so that ‘ an eye can be kept on her . ’ |
17 | Alan Cooke , who has the disadvantage of playing ‘ cold ’ in the doubles while his opponents are invariably warmed up from previous games , hit a cascade of winners in the crucial mid-match doubles . |
18 | Savings due to reduced admissions are dismissed by administrators because the saved places are readily used up from endless waiting lists . |
19 | The effect on our own accounts is that we now show all the mainstream activities of the Council together , and they are then separated out from the entries for all the other funds , appeals , and trust funds and so on . |
20 | The bio-reactors are cleverly rigged up from glass jars , tubing and other components and driven by the pump from a car windscreen washer . |