Example sentences of "[pron] [pron] have [vb pp] from " in BNC.

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1 Blood gushes forth like nothing I have seen from my own body .
2 From my point of view it was a complete success — fun , interesting and the chance for me to meet someone whom I 'd admired from afar since I was 14 years old .
3 And the Lord said I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the Earth …
4 The one-eyed porter whom I have known from childhood ; the station-master who ranges us all in ranks , beginning with the Duke and ending with a sad , frayed and literary man ; the little chaise in which the two old ladies from Barlton drive up to get their paper of an evening , the servant from the inn , the newsboy whose mother keeps a sweetshop — they are all my friends .
5 Erm I mean I I 've got from I think I 've certainly got Roger 's and and Norman 's erm stuff for
6 She had stopped to help someone who had fainted from hunger in the street .
7 When I first heard about it , someone said to me , within the next ten years , one of ten of us will know of someone who 's died from it .
8 Yet new approaches to treatment of incontinence , for example , mean that many people can learn to cope with the problem ; learning about how to communicate with deaf people can reduce the isolation of someone who has withdrawn from social contact because of hearing loss ; and modern drugs and careful monitoring by a general practitioner can reduce the effects of Parkinson 's Disease .
9 Similarly ( p 61 ) , first aiders are taught to begin the rescue of someone who has collapsed from fume and gas inhalation by going away to telephone .
10 From one or other of them I obtained the papers on the case , and these , together with the letters I myself had received from Meehan , were enough to dispel any lingering doubts .
11 and erm I had jaundice as well which I 'd contracted from Jim
12 All of which I 'd learnt from Churchill , of course .
13 Which I 've hidden from him , of course .
14 There 's a somebody called Finklehall who 's quite interested in understanding the the dynamics of abuse which I 've quoted from here .
15 My best course would have been to follow the track to the village , strike the road , and then to go along the road until I met the track by which I had come from the shore .
16 It was the manuscript of Lord Byron 's poem which I had retrieved from the floor on the previous evening .
17 The knowledge which I had acquired from the LCCIEB was so relevant that I enjoyed the course tremendously .
18 The grim knowledge that she was on the verge of suffocation appalled me and when she stumbled and almost fell the hand in my pocket gripped more tightly on the scalpel which I had taken from my car along with the adrenalin .
19 I went to the store to check up on some things , and saw that eight Kandinskys which I had bought from the widow of Kandinsky 's secretary were missing .
20 I therefore thought I should let you have a commentary on the proposals for amending the regulations , which I have received from the World- Wide Fund for Nature 's European Office , with which we are working closely .
21 The report which I have received from the police is receiving careful consideration .
22 The policy implications which I have drawn from the analyses mentioned above have been set out at greater length elsewhere ( Joshi , 1986 ) .
23 I live alone with my garden , a patch of London land which I have reclaimed from waist-high thistles , elderberries , brambles and rose thorns to a restrained wilderness of my own design .
24 You owe that to the extraordinary talents which you have received from a beneficent God ; and now it depends solely on your good sense and your way of life whether you die as an ordinary musician , utterly forgotten by the world , or as a famous Kapellmeister , of whom posterity will read …
25 I believed her on both counts , especially when she visited me for a weekend and gave me a bottle of ‘ Denim ’ aftershave which she had shoplifted from a Chemist in mid Wales .
26 She ran down the stairs , unbolted the heavy wooden door and was off , running in her nightdress , barefoot across the garden , holding the torch which she had snatched from the chest in the entrance hall .
27 Indoors she wore a long black pinafore-like garment , sleeveless and reaching almost to the ground , which she had made from a cotton material used later during the war for black-out curtains and called , I think , sateen .
28 She rummaged through the assorted pile , looking for her new lipstick and perfume , and spotted the mail which she had collected from the postman first thing , on her way to the shops .
29 A word which she had learned from Rose .
30 He realised with a sense of desperation that he would have to be twice as cunning as his wife if he was to recover that which she had taken from him .
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