Example sentences of "have [adv] [vb pp] from [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Lakes and rivers in heavily farmed counties such as Cavan have long suffered from irresponsible dumping by farmers .
2 If zoom shots have dated , multiple images and split-screen effects have long disappeared from regular use .
3 What they did incontestably leave were remarkable examples of those hard-wearing memorials which we have already observed from prehistoric times : stones .
4 Some of the skiers who have already benefited from this charity are Martin Bell , Deidre Angella , Michael Dixon , Louise McKenzie , Brynrefail School and Barnardo 's Homes .
5 Let me call in as assistant instructor none other than Mr Graham Greene , with the advice I have already mentioned from one of his books of autobiography .
6 Sir : I have just returned from five weeks in Zimbabwe , mostly at village level , and your leading article ( 6 October ) was right .
7 As I write , I have just returned from this gathering .
8 Your article on the Zambian food riots was accurate ( NI 189 ) : I have just returned from visiting friends who live on the Zambian Copperbelt and it was a shock to compare the well-provisioned tourist hotels with the half-empty shops in the city of Ndola .
9 Meanwhile it is male colleagues who have largely benefited from this anti-lesbianism .
10 These kinds of purity laws have gradually faded from explicit reference in modern Western Christianity .
11 Up to six years of cereal cash crops with a single ‘ root break ’ in the middle , followed by a two- or three-year ley is now typical : animals have practically disappeared from arable farms .
12 Equity ‘ bargain' averages have also increased from 7,280 to 36,148 over the same period .
13 Many of these features were examined by Artis , though some have also benefited from recent fieldwork and excavation .
14 Three spurs have also come from late levels : they are uncommon finds on Romano-British sites and suggest the presence of a cavalry unit here in the late fourth century .
15 Such calls have also come from supranational bodies , in particular the OECD and the UN .
16 I have now slumped from second overall and a possible £3,000 — £5,000 to outside the top ten and looking like winning nothing , I think it is fair to say through no fault of my own , but inadequate pegging .
17 Professor Keith Clayton of the University of East Anglia has warned that the odds of a disastrous storm surge , similar to that of 1953 which claimed many lives , have now narrowed from 1 in 100 to 1 in 25 .
18 Most of the early topics for review , such as debtor management , payment systems and self-billing , were selected by head office , but as confidence in the technique has grown , suggestions for further reviews have increasingly come from individual sites ; programme and project management and risk evaluation in project appraisals are examples .
19 Anyone who might oppose the new legislation can readily be branded as showing indifference towards the dreadful consequences which have sometimes flowed from these offences .
20 The hostility which farmers have recently provoked from many environmentalists also helps to confirm them in their characteristic persecution complex , associated with being a small , closely knit minority in an urban industrial society .
21 Not surprisingly I have never heard from any of them since , although I felt that I had made a number of new and lasting Russian friendships that night .
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