Example sentences of "from [pos pn] [noun pl] that [pron] " in BNC.

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1 In the past few months the complaints from my area from my customers that they are disgusted with the service they have received from Sports .
2 Sometimes I can tell from my clothes that my weight has changed , either up or down , but it does n't fill me with panic or even very much interest .
3 From this time on , I heard from my friends that there were secret conversations in the palace between the King and some of his lords , who were jealous of me .
4 I see from my files that we agreed to a slight change to the Agreement for the above tape , and a revised page 2 of the document was sent to you on 20 April .
5 I see from my files that you asked us to reserve a copy of the OALDCE 3/e computer tape for your the University of Edinburgh .
6 But it was only when I punched through the thick , creamy crest and the rainbow mist cleared from my eyes that I finally gave up all hope .
7 Does he share my concern about some prisoners being put in prisons that are so far away from their families that it is a difficult and expensive business for the wives and chilldren — especially if there are young children — to travel half way round the country to see their fathers or relatives ?
8 I had few friends , just one or two left over from school , but on the infrequent occasions when we met I could see from their faces that they pitied me , finding me foolish and Syl a bore .
9 There is an increasing number of young inmates so cut off from their feelings that they have no fear and no sense of compassion .
10 They will have heard repeated discussions with other people previously , or comments from their parents that they are ‘ bad and naughty ’ .
11 It had been from their lips that I first heard uttered the expression avare comme un juif , followed by a vicious attack on the only Jewish family in their village to have survived the war and returned to claim their old house .
12 But he can see from their eyes that they look upon him now as someone who will transcend the collective and desert it .
13 Neither David nor the superintendent replied , but Rachel knew from their expressions that they agreed with her .
14 He had figured from her stories that she had a more passionate temperament and had hoped she 'd shout and scream at his wife .
15 She was only half aware that Rachel was heavily subsidising her rent , because she was living in a part of London and a sort of house so different from her friends that she had no easy comparisons .
16 He saw from her eyes that she could not , would not believe him .
17 This time , however , the physicist could see from his instruments that it had not been totally successful .
18 Heseltine has an awesome reputation in Whitehall for generating loyalty and enthusiasm among his civil servants — he is , in fact , accorded the sort of political devotion from his mandarins that he should expect from his daughter .
19 I thought that , instead of speaking from his notes that he 'd been speaking from year after year , he was reassessing what he was doing .
20 Yet this man found himself unloved , in that he demanded so much from his friends that he could not find a close , enduring relationship to satisfy him .
21 In terms of Greater York and its th the York greenbelt I think it 's true to say that er some time ago when David Kaiserman of Manchester did research on greenbelts he came to the view , or he came up with the conclusions from his questionnaires that he sent round , and that study was done , must be ten , fifteen years ago or more , that greenbelts should endure unchanged for at least twenty years , and probably in excess of thirty , and those were the responses of county planning and other major planning authorities at that time , that view if anything has hardened , the public view would be way beyond thirty years .
22 It was an exquisitely warm afternoon in Aswan-just the sort of day for which the swallows fly so far , When the Shah walked slowly down from the plane , looking drawn and exhausted , Sadat stepped forward to kiss him on both cheeks — despite advice from his officials that he should be more circumspect with the fallen King .
23 Shiona could see from his eyes that he meant it .
24 Well , very briefly , the ideas was Freud in his early practice was getting stories from his patients that they had somehow been sexually interfered with or abused or something of the kind when they were very young , often by an older male friend of the family , a relative , or even their father and initially Freud thought these reminiscences were literally true .
25 We reached the low white picket-fence , the only insulation from his subjects that he cared to have .
26 Indeed , it is from our failures that we learn our most valuable lessons .
27 The most healing tears are those which neither overwhelm us with pain , nor are so detached from our feelings that we do not really own them .
28 This is not supposed to be a travelogue , and I can see from your faces that you want a little more than a cheery jaunt …
29 And I heard him read from your notes that you were an only child , with no brothers or sisters .
30 ‘ I see from your notes that your doctor saw you a few days ago . ’
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