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

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1 I 'd heard from a sceptic that there were only six basic shots in surfing photography and everything else was just window dressing .
2 ‘ My sole reason for invading your maiden privacy , ’ he said with sarcasm , ‘ was because I 'd heard from the police .
3 This is not always the case , though — I once had a kestrel that I 'd decided from its plumage was a male and it turned out to be a female , and although this has never happened to me with a barn owl , I know people who 've made that mistake .
4 and erm I had jaundice as well which I 'd contracted from Jim
5 Almost without being aware of it I 'd progressed from the hesitancy of my first few days there to a strong positive desire to go down to the starting gate : any starting gate , anywhere .
6 All of which I 'd learnt from Churchill , of course .
7 In the end I threw my yoghurt pot full of glue at her and said the ‘ f ’ word I 'd learnt from Auntie .
8 I 'd refrained from advertising any more for fear that we would be overwhelmed .
9 Whatever it was I 'd taken from Sunil 's house — and I 'd only done it as a favour to him , after all — he could n't have said anything to Nassim about it .
10 I wedged it in the carrier bag with the papers I 'd taken from Salome 's briefcase and then we went in search of the veggie noshery recommended by Fenella 's nice policeman .
11 Never having been one to look an unguarded telephone in the mouth , I made another call to the number on the Exhilarator brochure I 'd taken from Salome 's case .
12 They 'd all gone to bed the night before when I 'd returned from a last noggin with Harry .
13 But he only had about a couple of hours to do it in — after I 'd rung from Hannover .
14 There was no tension in him : when he was tense there was a rigidity in his neck muscles , a rigidity I 'd watched from the depths of the crowd during the brief day of his trial and seen a few times since , as at Nottingham .
15 The atmosphere was less turbid than I 'd expected from Edward 's description — a glowing , orange-red furnace of heat in which I could make out the shadowy profiles of two pots .
16 I was wearing mostly stuff that I 'd pinched from films I 'd done mod gear from Quadropehnia and Take 6-cum-Paul Smith from Breaking Glass .
17 From my point of view it was a complete success — fun , interesting and the chance for me to meet someone whom I 'd admired from afar since I was 14 years old .
18 There I dampened some paper towels and wiped the flour off the goodies I 'd removed from Flaxperson .
19 The only touch I was remotely pleased with was an elegant , cane-handled parasol I 'd borrowed from a colleague .
20 We dismounted from the BMW and Werewolf slipped on a pair of gold-rimmed shades , which reminded me to put on the plain glass Yuppie specs I 'd borrowed from Fly .
21 This is thanks to the help I have received from my wife , my children , and a large number of other people and organizations .
22 Not only would I have refrained from interfering with Thorpe J. 's decision on the footing that he had properly directed himself and that it was for him to decide , but because , even on the facts as they then were , I consider that his decision was plainly right .
23 Continuing on past the huge oak door I had observed from the outside was another passage leading to a cloakroom , as the euphemism goes , otherwise a loo and wash basin and turning right I was back in the main area .
24 If it was like seeing a long lost friend again after twenty-seven years , Darby O'Gill was comfortingly predictable with touches of the old sparkle but we had lost a lot of common ground as I had moved from a place of romance and innocence through a world of cynicism and calculated sophistication .
25 I was still very pleased , however , when the statistician Ian Hodge told me at the end of the year that I had moved from being 156th in the world 100 metres ranking list in 1985 to 4th in 1986 !
26 I had moved from his shoulder , so he got up and retrieved my hat .
27 When some years ago I decided to pay the Life Governor 's subscription the expense was for me a serious cost but was willing to pay it to ensure that I should continue to enjoy the privileges without having to worry about future subscriptions when I had retired from salaried work .
28 I would never again speak of sin , certainly not to Lili , for one of the messages I had gathered from her speech was that it would bore her .
29 I knew nothing at all about England , apart from what I had gathered from reading a number of the works of P.G .
30 For one who , when left alone would get out the frying pan , pour in a little oil — I had converted from lard — and then proceed to fry a mixed grill of bacon , eggs , bread , mushrooms and tomatoes , the idea of pulses and sprouting beans were as alien as the little bug-eyed monsters from outer space .
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