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

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1 He was conscious that Therese had been engaging in ‘ business ’ but had n't appreciated how it had looked from the front until it was too late to do anything about it .
2 It 's about the craft of knitwear and how it 's developed from hand-knitting into the modern production units there are today .
3 Maybe it had blown from the farm ; a grain bag , or a sack of feed for the hens .
4 So the flooding had not been from the lake — which hitherto I had assumed to be the case ; maybe it had come from the river whose bed , now dried , I had seen from my eminence on the hillside .
5 The concern known since 1873 as the Gutehoffnungshütte A.G. was by no means the largest in the Ruhr , but by then it had extended from iron-founding into quarrying and mining iron ore and coal — it produced practically all the 215,000 tons of iron ore and half the 415,000 tons of coal it required — and had diversified into transport , rolling and the construction of bridges , ships , and a variety of machinery .
6 In 1973 the industry came under national control and since then it has expanded from nearly 44 000 ha to more than 70 000 ha and employs more than 22 per cent of the island 's labour force .
7 The Hong Kong economy performed poorly in the first half of 1990 , but not nearly as badly as in the second half of 1989 when it had suffered from the international reaction to the upheavals in China .
8 I had got one souvenir and if not identifiable with the shed , at least I knew where it had come from .
9 ‘ They wanted our money but did not want anyone to know where it had come from .
10 It called out in alarm , turned , raced back to where it had come from and then disappeared .
11 Pascoe saw where it had come from , that excitement , that unstoppable hunger .
12 Two uniforms were trying to put an extendable ladder up to the skylight — God knows where it had come from — over the bath without actually having to look at the body .
13 If I knew where it had come from I would do it .
14 And the award was a certificate from the home secretary a very treasured certificate from a highly respected member of the cabinet , and erm where it 's gone from there we had a meeting at the home office
15 But if you do n't know where it 's come from it really is n't as much use .
16 When y when you 're dealing with seventeen feet of strata as in York , you n you need to know where it 's come from .
17 and I 've told you where it 's come from , can you say that is too much
18 it 's never had that before , I 'm just trying to work out where it 's come from .
19 They do n't know where it 's come from , they have never have done and they never will .
20 you 'd have one hell of a row over something daft but it was di got this idea in her mind so I can see now where it 's come from .
21 You have first of all to establish where you are , or where the business stands relative to where it has come from because that indeed will produce the current direction and speed of movement which unless changed will tell you pretty inexorably where you are likely to end up .
22 An explorer who does not compile maps as he or she proceeds is likely to end up going round in circles ; likewise , a society that does not know where it has come from in the past has no chance of knowing where it is going in the future .
23 It is obviously advantageous for an animal to receive more detailed information about where it is going to than about where it has come from , and it is therefore not surprising that as well as the mouth at the front end of the planaria there is a concentration of sense organs , such as light-sensitive eyepits , and to process the information arriving from these sense organs there is a group of ganglia concentrated in the head — forming at last the forerunners of real brains .
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