Example sentences of "from [noun] [adv] over " in BNC.

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1 ‘ When our case was originally rejected we got calls from authorities all over the country saying ‘ What 's going on ? ’ . ’
2 It is the same battle , in a new form , which dates centuries back , and which finds support from peoples all over the ‘ Third World ’ who have been fighting and dying for too long for something which is so clearly their birthright .
3 Hundreds of thousands of personal pledges received from countries all over the world will be attached to the Tree of Life as a powerful visual expression of the concern of individuals for the state of the Earth and their commitment to protect it .
4 Representatives from countries all over the world met in Nairobi at the end of June to discuss the greenhouse effect .
5 Offers of help for the Bosnian evacuees have been received from countries all over the world including Britain .
6 Over forty-five gigantic works of Social Realism have been dismantled from sites all over the city and hauled to a 1.5 hectare sculpture park on the southern outskirts of the Hungarian capital .
7 Wine is exported from areas all over the world .
8 The original was discovered as one of 115,000 samples taken from plants all over the world .
9 Not only is she busy sending out subscription forms to the existing 220 members , she is also coping with the dozens of enquiries from amateurs all over the world looking to turn professional .
10 It was proposed that the students of Torcy 's academy should be employed in making " a more complete and exact collection of peace-treaties " , with an accompanying commentary ; while the largest such enterprise hitherto , the Corps universel diplomatique du droit des gens of J. Dumont de Carlscroon ( twelve volumes : Amsterdam — The Hague , 1726 ) , an assembly of documents reaching back to the age of Charlemagne and drawn from sources all over Europe , was designed mainly as a help in policy-making and a kind of portable archive for the use of diplomats .
11 The small tools have come from yards all over the country .
12 Gone was the flattened-out effect ; a more contoured look was possible with these sticks that could be bought from chemists all over the country .
13 Our advisory services answer thousands of queries from people all over the country .
14 FIVE FUNKY FEMALES between 17 and 18 years into soul/hip hop/house- Enjoy warehouse parties , would seriously love to hear from people all over the place , especially males who would like to show us some good places .
15 ‘ Although we have had bookings from people all over Britain , strangely no one has expressed any interest from Northern Ireland , ’ she added .
16 The Pope 's 450-page draft text has been drawn up with the help of 24,000 suggestions from bishops all over the world .
17 Finally , thank you to all those readers who wrote from smallholdings all over Britain expressing their support for the John McCarthy campaign .
18 Detectives have already been to Scotland to talk to colleagues there … and they 're pooling information with officers from forces all over Britain .
19 Erlich had seen nothing like it in CI-3 , in Washington Field Office , where each room had photos of wives stuck onto cork boards , of kids , postcards from vacations all over the world , cartoons , clippings of headlines and a huge blow-up of a quote from an English thriller writer : ‘ The most suspicious , unbelieving , unreasonable , petty , inhuman , sadistic , double-crossing set of bastards in any language [ are ] the people who run counter-espionage departments . ’
20 WOMEN managers from colleges all over Wales will gather at the St David 's Park Hotel at Ewloe today for the launch of the Network for Women Managers in Further and Continuing Education in Wales .
21 Due to the obsession of most comparative sociologists with problems of measurement , all sight of a global system was lost in the mists of dubious generalization about a host of discrete variables from societies all over the world .
22 Half the visitors were from societies all over the North but the other half were people who came out of interest and curiosity . ’
23 Two lower jaws , one from Lothagam in northern Kenya is now dated at older than 5.6Myr , and a slightly younger lower jaw from Tabarin from deposits just over 5Myr share very similar morphology with each other and with Australopithecus afarensis .
24 There were many representatives from churches all over our diocese who went to lobby their MPs .
25 The period from the building of the first cotton mills up to a restrictive parliamentary act of 1816 was the era of the factory apprentices — pauper children brought from workhouses all over the country to be indentured to misery .
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