Example sentences of "[vb past] from [det] part " in BNC.

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1 Doubtless at the time of the wool barons the church had a full congregation , but the economic tide had long ago receded from this part of the world .
2 By Foreign Staff OUTRAGE and concern at the violence in Romania during the weekend came from all parts of the world yesterday , with the Soviet Union and the US in the lead .
3 Most of the climbers at the camp came from all parts of the now-disintegrating Soviet Union .
4 They came from all parts of the kingdom and abroad .
5 The heads of various departments , foremen and other key workers were recruited from just across the county boundary in Sheffield and south Yorkshire ; the rest of the labour force came from many parts of Britain and Ireland .
6 This was the 1st Ukrainian Division , many of whose members came from those parts of Poland incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1939 and which had been such a special concern of the AFHQ letter of 6 March defining " Soviet nationals " .
7 It was the Steward , however , who arrived from those parts , in the late afternoon , with over five hundred from Bute and his Renfrew and Paisley lordships .
8 The early travellers who returned from all parts of the world with new recipes and ideas for incorporating herbs and spices did much to widen the knowledge of cheesemaking techniques .
9 Easily reached from most parts of the country , short sea crossings to Fleetwood , Stranraer and Cairnryan , coupled with up to 34 ferry arrivals and departures daily illustrate the Port of Larne 's importance to Industry and Commerce .
10 And yet , on this fevered night … he stared at the heavy , handsome head , looked at it until it became a strange thing to him , a feeling of stone , a sight he saw from another part of the room , this unbodied head reflected more truly in the mirror than in the live skull itself …
11 Jung remarked that when his mother spoke from this part of her nature she could be unnervingly accurate , and in his book gives several examples of this .
12 These colleges , though , soon proved inadequate for the ‘ all comers who promiscuously flocked from all parts to this University ’ ( Peck ) and other friaries , disliking the mixture of lay and secular education , established their own schools .
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