Example sentences of "[noun sg] have [adv] [vb pp] from " in BNC.
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1 | This driver has just returned from France , after managing to get through the blockade . |
2 | Professor Jack Spence of Leicester university has just returned from a fact-finding tour of South Africa . |
3 | Extra income has also come from bank interest earned on appeal funds already deposited . |
4 | Money was allocated , but due to delays in passage of the Bill through Parliament , as has so often been the case before , no money has actually flowed from the coffers in Rome . |
5 | A delegation of lawyers from the British Romanian Law Association has just returned from a successful trip to Romania , having given seminars in two Romanian cities and met with representatives of the Romanian Bar Association . |
6 | Agriculture has fewer and fewer workers to give up to industry or the tertiary sector , and short-term migrant or daily labour has steadily declined from a peak in the 1960s . |
7 | Perhaps the most compelling confirmation has however come from Pacione ( 1980 ) and his study of the ‘ metropolitan village ’ of Milton of Campsie to the northeast of Glasgow . |
8 | In the Netherlands , industry has already benefited from the presence of AEA Technology ( Netherlands ) BV , launched in November 1992 ; safety and reliability is the main focus of the new subsidiary . |
9 | But the newspaper industry has also suffered from mismanagement . |
10 | A reply has eventually arrived from the National Dairy Council . |
11 | The North-East has traditionally suffered from a stereotype image depicting the region as backward in its approach to equal opportunities . |
12 | We get caught out with long balls to where our defender has just come from . |
13 | The suggestion of hiring a car had almost come from these two ; it had been their talk of the small towns , the cedar woods , the mountains , which had fascinated Dan so much . |
14 | Seb started , as though his mind had suddenly returned from a very long distance . |
15 | In point of fact , in terms of Catholic tradition , the challenges here might be less awkward than those of phase 2 ( and to some extent John Paul II was able to recognize this ) , but the crucial ecclesiastical issue once more ( as in phase 1 ) had become the acceptability of diversity , and the curial mind had never escaped from the conviction that unity requires uniformity . |
16 | Their arrival had been delayed for a fortnight after Gen. Farah Aydid claimed on July 7 that an aircraft with UN markings bringing food aid had also carried from Nairobi military equipment and counterfeit money for his rival , Somalia 's transitional President , Ali Mahdi Mohammed . |
17 | There was a true feeling of achievement attached to our little ‘ I skied down a mountain' certificate , and a bit of weight had definitely dropped from the thighs on to the slopes . |
18 | The process of industrialization and the accelerated growth of the division of labour had already wrested from the family , including its rural variant , its monopolistic role in the processes of production . |
19 | By the time it published the first issue of its bulletin , STOP , in February 1980 the DUC had effectively changed from being an information and research group into an opposition group , as the bulletin made clear : ‘ After investigation into the hazards related to uranium and its by-products , the DUC feels that since uranium can not be mined safely , exploration should cease . ’ |
20 | The light had almost gone from the day now and the forest was becoming bathed in soft , subtle hues of the Purple Hour , Dark blue and turquoise light slanted in through the trees , turning the Wolfwood to a place of dark secret shadows and heavy ancient magic . |
21 | The envelope of project work has now emerged from the planning described in Chapter 2 . |
22 | The envelope of project work has now emerged from the planning described in Chapter 2 . |
23 | The substantive work has consequently shifted from the party headquarters , where all decisions used to be made , to the conference hall and the corridors . |
24 | ‘ Ballroom dancing has certainly gained from the new film . |
25 | Substantial cash help has also come from the National Heritage Memorial Fund ( £40,000 ) , the Countryside Commission for Scotland ( £40,000 ) , the Christopher Brasher Trust ( £30,000 ) and many others . |
26 | Peter Dimond , a Director of the Tangmere Military Aviation Museum has recently returned from a trip to the USSR and reports he has seen five Hurricanes and at least one P-40 . |
27 | The locus of power over village decision-making has therefore receded from the Big House to County Hall and on , in many cases , to Whitehall . |
28 | This process of self-observation has already matured from the assimilation of media images , which are often more strongly inforced than the female role-models in everyday life . |
29 | The Swiss competitor is a talented athlete having recently returned from the Winter Paralympics in France where he took part in the cross country sledging . |
30 | These low rates of economic activity reflect the requirement to have formally retired from paid work in order to receive the state retirement pension in Britain . |