Example sentences of "it [vb past] from [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It came from many sources and for many reasons ; but the growth of Romanesque churches in the eleventh and early twelfth centuries was stimulated first and foremost by the flocks of pilgrims who arrived on major festivals and sought shelter and a place to worship in the presence of the high altar of a great church and the shrines of its saints .
2 It came from many quarters , both domestic and foreign , for his megalomaniac , as it was often characterized , insistence on Iran 's ‘ imperial vocation ’ of which in 1972 he celebrated the 2,500th birthday .
3 It came from that boy 's garden .
4 ‘ Whatever it was , it came from this book .
5 It came from some boy 's garden .
6 No , it came from half way along the hall , up under the stair carpet and into the erm front bedroom , but it , it did n't have a , a sort of , you know the
7 However , it retreated from this position , partly because it feared strong adverse reaction particularly from its political Right , and also because it had seriously underestimated the number of Arabs in Gaza , at 100,000–150,000 when it was nearer 280,000 .
8 There must be some height , call it h , such that an animal would just break its neck if it fell from that height , but would just survive if it fell from a slightly lower height .
9 At one point , when the cab driver crashed a late amber light , Manville thought he had shaken off his pursuer , only to identify the vehicle a few moments later as it re-emerged from another side-street .
10 However , for all the heat generated by the scandal , it appeared from this week 's developments that the opposition is still far from identifying the ‘ smoking bank account ’ that would ruin Mr Gandhi 's career .
11 On the contrary , it appeared from several provisions relating to the Common Fisheries Policy that that policy , far from being exempt from the basic principles of Community law ( such as the prohibition of discrimination , the right of establishment and the principle of the free movement of goods ) , was expressly subjected to each of them .
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