Example sentences of "from [Wh det] i [verb] [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 If , bearing in mind the theory of society and superego development so far advanced in this book , we now turn our attention back to the analysis of modern culture outlined in the article from which I quoted so extensively in the chapter before last , we can see that the following remarks , also from that article , take on a much greater significance in the light of the point which I made at the conclusion of the last regarding the lack of a culturally determined latency period among the Australian aborigines :
2 The modem world from which I had briefly stepped aside seemed to come crowding in again .
3 My tapestries and books were turning into pitch-thick smoke , and the heat , from which I had hitherto been protected , it seems , by the initial surge of adrenalin through my body , now made it plain that this was the last window of opportunity for effecting a dignified , if empty-handed , exit .
4 Even if it is only for one moment that a spasm in your face draws my attention to the intensity of your pain , a glimpse from which I flinch back into insensibility , it is during that moment that a choice between my conflicting pulls to help and to ignore will be made in fullest awareness .
5 There is other gear : another pin , from which I pick out chunky flakes with my little finger , a zero Flexible Friend behind an expanding flake which , when I leave this stance an hour later , I will rip from its placement , and a wire which rattles uselessly in a flared crack .
6 It gave me an unwelcome feeling and a ‘ you 're not wanted here , get out ’ complex , from which I became utterly pessimistic and a trifle hostile .
7 Another amusing , but really quite typical example which transparently reveals the father-protest behind all other protests is provided by one of the cases cited in the study from which I have already quoted at length :
8 A split appears to be spoken of in the conversation from which I have just quoted : formed by the past , he is also deformed by it .
9 At the beginning of the section from which I have just quoted he distinguishes two ‘ objects ’ of sight , between which , he says , there is a categorial difference .
10 And Karen Armstrong , in the article from which I have just quoted , explained why she left teaching .
11 Despite what the hon. Gentleman has said , from which I do not dissent , the fact is that only 15 minutes of the time that the Prime Minister chaired the summit of the Group of Seven countries was spent on the environment .
12 But from what I saw through there in your surgery you have n't much in the way of up-to-date equipment — only the bare necessity .
13 I 'd be a lot happier if I could disentangle myself from What I 've already done and create songs from a completely fresh perspective . ’
14 Well well er yes well from what I 've already learnt , and I 've got to be rather blunt in this matter , I 'm afraid that Carol 's expectations
15 I do n't I do n't know that I 'd fancy doing , I mean I did like biology , but I do n't think I 'd specifically want to do the biology at the level that they 're doing it up there , cos it 's too much of a jump from what I 've ever done before
16 From what I heard afterwards , ’ Bridget said dismissively , ‘ Gilly was behaving like a drama queen .
17 By what I can gather they must have lived in Durham for a time , 'cos when she was saying her prayers she brought in a Mrs Melburn , a parson 's wife , who was kind to them after the father died or whatever , an' from what I made out of her jabbering the woman and the mother have written to each other .
18 A certain amount of cross-border examination to ensure that European Community rules are met already exists and , as my hon. Friend knows from what I said earlier , in future we shall have much tighter enforcement rules to ensure that those countries — all of them — that sign up to European directives will have to obey those directives or face fines for not doing so .
19 Tonight I said nothing different from what I said before .
20 It means that , depending on the context , I can communicate something subtly different from what I intended before without us first having to go through the rigmarole of defining new terminology to extend the language .
21 For just running away from what I did n't like , instead of trying to change it .
22 It will be clear from what I have already said that I myself do not have a Christology and am not a Christian .
23 It will be apparent from what I have already said that I agree with the views expressed by Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. in In re J. ( A Minor ) ( Wardship : Medical Treatment ) [ 1991 ] Fam. 33 , 41–42 .
24 The Zoology here , from what I have already seen , is likely to be of a most interesting description , totally different in its nature from that of Sydney , but probably approaching nearer in its character to the productions found beyond the Liverpool range , or what is more properly called the interior of New South Wales . ’
25 from what I have n't thought of
  Next page