Example sentences of "[noun sg] was from [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To the right of the main buildings there was an open veranda or gallery with balusters and a sloping floor and entry was from the house .
2 On his brief visit to Cambodia he met Dith Pran for the first time , but his longest stretch was from the beginning of January 1975 until the fall of Phnom Penh in April of that year .
3 In the south , that is Denmark and southern Sweden , the influence was from the Baltic : Holland , northern Germany and Poland .
4 Akbar was from a desert land-train clan .
5 A complex lighting system had once worked , but now the only illumination was from the gaps in the roof which allowed streams of sunlight to pour through into the empty , lifeless environment .
6 Tracing the original owner , I found that the wood was from a timber outbuilding , and has been left to the tender mercies of the council or the local pyromaniac .
7 The top cutting was from the Sunday Times ; underneath , she spotted items from both the Guardian and the Sun .
8 Basil 's widowed father , a natural son of the Earl of Sandwich , formed part of Wordsworth 's circle of London friends , and the proposal that Wordsworth and Dorothy should become responsible for the child was from the beginning an important part of their plans for life at Racedown .
9 Clare 's cry was from the heart .
10 This inquiry was from a third-year pupil who had seen Prestel demonstrated in the information skills course where there is an emphasis on career information and the pupils use the large collection of Career materials in the library .
11 The letter that had caught Anne 's attention was from a girl who said she earned one pound seventeen shillings and sixpence a week .
12 He was alarmed at the possibility that this lad was from the village and that the village was rife with gossip .
13 The pop was from an airgun , not a bullet , being fired .
14 The third doubtfully determined outcome was from a builder who had been in financial difficulties .
15 Hence the likelihood that his diaries would have contained material of a secret nature which needed to be suppressed by legal and governmental intervention was from the outset slight .
16 The Antipodean gentleman was from the Textile Museum in Melbourne which is where the carpet is now displayed .
17 The cab was from an M-F 1200 and link arms came from a David Brown .
18 The nearest clean water was from the standpipe in the churchyard ; they did not like to wash their finds there , because the water was for the flowers on the graves , but Martha fetched some in a bucket .
19 Five minutes into the second half , the parry was from the boy was looking for his first goal , and it 's picking up the pieces for his second of the afternoon .
20 The first leg of the voyage was from the Tyne to Bergen in Norway , where a second group of trainees , from England took over to sail her back across the North Sea .
21 In the 1950s , the bulk of immigration was from the Caribbean , the men coming first , followed by their families .
22 The Association 's choice of name was from the outset controversial .
23 The second outing was from the car park on Chalk Hill .
24 One was from the editor , regretting that there were no vacancies , the other was from the news editor , asking him to come to Dublin immediately for an interview .
25 The only valuation evidence was from the valuer called by the defendants ( who was not cross-examined ) and who put the value of Caliban at between $2.1 and $2.3m .
26 The opening was from a book called Joyce , By Her Friends , and was a piece written by Verily Anderson which conjured up an imaginary car ride with Joyce : ‘ Turn left any minute now and then sharp right and straight under a low lying archway with a very steep mews .
27 Iconoclasm was from the outset inspired by the government .
28 In May 1985 Mr Bewick had been duped into believing a kidney given by a living Indian donor was from a relative , Mr Sells said .
29 One such offer was from a theme park in Dogpatch , Arkansas , which is devoted to cast-off metal monuments .
30 It was often difficult , for the experimenter , to judge the exact position of the target in relation to the metre rule and precisely how far the subject 's finger was from the target .
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