Example sentences of "has be [adv] from " in BNC.

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1 All the services listed offer free guidance to anyone over the age of 19 who has been away from education for a significant period .
2 She may also use it as a greeting when she has been away from the kittens for a while .
3 In this sense the particular manipulation of reality found in the adventure story , at least until the past two or three decades , has been away from the practicalities of extended cohabitation , whether in or out of marriage .
4 With a new emphasis on the importance of the Word , the trend has been away from hymns , anthems and settings .
5 In music , as with other subjects , the trend has been away from regimentation towards an individual approach and small group work .
6 The trend , in recent years , has been away from a system of strict , item by item controls to broad limitations upon total borrowing .
7 But as someone who has been away from the industry for five years , I see a surprisingly rosy future for the book itself .
8 The June 5 announcement that Foreign Minister Ghozali was to be the new Prime Minister prompted favourable international press comment ; Tehran radio said that he was " recognized by the Islamists as someone who has been away from domestic confrontation " .
9 Mature Student was defined as someone who has been away from continuous education for more than one year .
10 Peaceful , mellow and noble , in the shade of a great sycamore , it is the sort of house that feels as though it has been there from time immemorial .
11 Its profits record , which has been far from outstanding , suggests that it is wrong .
12 Both her looks and personality came from a ride to stardom that has been far from comfortable .
13 The task of loading and storing the data has been far from trivial ; for one thing , the total raw data in the SAS/LBS for Great Britain at all areal levels comes to some 6–7 gigabytes .
14 But the year since Robert Maxwell 's death has been far from comfortable .
15 In Ivory Coast the transfer of ownership has been essentially from the foreign private investor to the local private investor : government remains the owner of 50 per cent of corporate capital ( as it has been since the 1960s ) and the foreign investors ' share has been reduced to 30 per cent , with the local private sector taking the remainder .
16 The sovereign power inherent in the British Crown , as exercised through Council and through Parliament , derives not from a treaty or document or compact , but from prescription , from the fact that it has been so from time immemorial — that it is immanent in the nation itself .
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