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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It is therefore simplest to interpret these results in terms of an inability to remember that food has just been obtained from a particular arm .
2 As well as support from Prime Minister John Major , a donation of £750 has just been received from that other MCC , in St John 's Wood .
3 67770 has just been detached from Standard class 5 73156 at Victoria .
4 Civilians , accompanied by RUC officers , can be seen moving away from the area , having just been evacuated from their houses .
5 So w er we did what we 've just been suggested from the front here you see .
6 But her terrifying three-hour ordeal ended when police overpowered Khamton Omvaree , in his thirties — who had just been freed from a 10-year sentence under a royal amnesty .
7 Similarly , in the report of ‘ a sex beast nicknamed ‘ The Acne Kid ’ ’ ( Star ) , who boasted to the victim that he had just been freed from prison and said : ‘ I 've served time for rape before ’ , speculation about this possible link was scotched quickly .
8 Lips tight , fists clenched , eyes narrow , breath held , back straight , stomach in , chest out , shoulders back , Steven Grout stamped away from the depot he had just been fired from , away from their stupid job and those awful people .
9 He had just been de-mobbed from the Army , intended to go up to Oxford to work for his Doctorate in the autumn , and was looking for a house for his mother who had recently been divorced .
10 Those poor children in the Cairngorms had just been recovered from the clutches of what can only be described as moronic supervisors .
11 And three of them had just been whipped from under me .
12 Pritt , MP , who had just been expelled from the Labour Party , its main support came from the Communists .
13 Nearby , a cart horse had just been released from its harness and was busy munching at its fodder ; the up-ended cart stood to one side .
14 A pair of French burr stones have just been removed from the mill , as well as the bedstone of the other pair .
15 The lecture theatre resonates like a drum with the chatter of a hundred-odd students , all talking at once , as if they have just been released from solitary confinement .
16 I simply say that on the debates we 've had on the Policing Bill , I 've learnt what the functions of your Noble House is all about and the speech that 's just been made from across the Chamber from me , sums up entirely my views on the matter , and I say to your Lordships House that on the basis of experience as Northern Ireland Secretary when one is a Home Secretary for a province and there 's a number of people in this House who 've had a job to do including the Noble Lord , The Noble Viscount Whitelaw who set the tone of the way we all proceeded , I accept that , the one of the things we had to do there was bring democracy back to policing and the primary force of policing is taking a long time to do and that here as Home Secretary , everything I learned there was , stop the growing centralisation and the weakening of the police authorities and police force and this Bill does exactly that But now one of the questions I 've asked myself and it 's the only point because all the points have been made that I really want to ask the Government is what are these appointees for ?
17 He 's just been released from hospital .
  Next page