Example sentences of "we [adv] [verb] from " in BNC.

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1 Much of what we feel , what we most remember from those times , is a sense of having missed the party .
2 Lovely steady Welsh stage manager , John Ormerod , on ‘ the book ’ … we gingerly start from the top .
3 No we only start from the Grand Place and then we sit on the there 's a big escarpment on the and then we sit there
4 It amazes me just how much was achieved , with such positive results , especially as we only dug from 2.15 to 6.00 P.m .
5 he certainly found me and from there we just went from strength to strength and erm were still have together .
6 Yeah , well we 'll take erm Michael gave us say erm a , an assembly sheet did n't he and we just read from that , and that got a lot of interest from that .
7 Oh yes , I think the story is that , Matthew heard this voice , shall we just read from there ?
8 ‘ Meeting her ’ , reported the interviewer to his male ( presumably ) compatriots ‘ shocked me into realizing how little we normally expect from women . ’
9 ‘ This is the type of excuse we normally expect from British Rail .
10 When we finally emerged from the mouth of the tributary it was evident that the Thames was in flood .
11 We finally departed from the house as the pillager 's husband was scrabbling through the kitchen drawers in search of a rubber band he knew he 'd once seen in there somewhere …
12 Housman took " Diffugere nives " personally , we already know from anecdote — and perhaps might infer from the publishing history of his own Englishing of the poem .
13 We already know from Frank 's testimony on Monday how violent and conscienceless he became on temazepam .
14 We can form the idea of a golden mountain , or of a centaur , by combining and adapting others we already have from experience .
15 We usually sourced from Olympic in the States but we had to start looking elsewhere .
16 The building was always damp , cold and we always suffered from chilblains in winter … ’
17 We always start from the experiences of the women .
18 Er well we always start from what does the operator of this aircraft want to use it for .
19 In our family we always learn from each other .
20 But to look at the problem from another angle , none of us lives in an environment free from synthetic chemicals — if we did , would we still suffer from those ‘ everyday symptoms ’ such as headaches ?
21 We still hear from some of them .
22 ‘ There may be high unemployment in this area , but we still suffer from a skills shortage , ’ says John Coltman , personnel director of Royal Mail Letters , a leading sponsor of the Newcastle compact .
23 We still trade from there , but in order to thrive we have had to look at better ways of selling . ’
24 And how many biscuit firms came and we still bought from every one of them .
25 ‘ Do we ever escape from this place , Corp ? ’
26 We also heard from someone who suffered with us in the hands of Southwark Offset , which tried to modernise us in the 1960s ( Letters , p 476 ) .
27 We also get from the book a sense of the terrible waste of young life , even among the professional middle class from which most informants came .
28 We also know from studies that foster children can relate to both birth family figures and foster carers ( Thorpe , 1974 ; Rowe et al . ,
29 We also know from the honest remarks of the right hon. Member for Bethnal Green and Stepney ( Mr. Shore ) that around two fifths of the Labour party opposed its Front Bench 's policy on Europe .
30 where , all the time , we also escape from the notion of the sea-floor subsiding all the time .
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