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Example sentences for "drawn from"

  • But what inference can be drawn from this, or what would they amount to, if they were not to be supreme?

  • They are De deo Socratis, De Dogmate Platonis in three books, and the De Mundo, a popular theologico-scientific exposition, drawn from Aristotle.

  • His work is entitled Historiae Alexandri Magni, and is drawn from Clitarchus, Timagenes, and Ptolomaeus.

  • Further information, however, may be drawn from experiments on plane polarized light.

  • The sense of words, the inferences to be drawn from them, and the effect which they produce are not so easily defined as gross matters of fact.

  • This last argument is drawn from Mr. Morgan's work.

  • Several important conclusions can be drawn from a study of this locality.

  • This illustration of my argument is drawn from a matter of fact.

  • If it be merely the refuge of weakness or wild fanaticism, and not a governing principle of conduct, drawn from self-knowledge, and a rational opinion respecting the attributes of God, what can it be expected to produce?

  • If they are wiped clean, as soon as the meat is drawn from them, and while they are hot, a very little cleaning will be necessary.

  • For this purpose a large cylindrical vessel of cast-iron should be elevated in a corner of the scullery, in order that water may be drawn from it by a cock.

  • Let them drink clean water, or the milk of the rice; but when rice is given them, after being perfectly soaked, let as much of the moisture as possible be drawn from it.

  • You come to my second argument, drawn from Ephesians 4:4-6.

  • This homely allusion, drawn from Bunyan's trade of blacksmith, is worthy of remark.

  • Drawn from impressions in the British Museum: Harl.

  • Drawn from an impression among the Select Seals in the British Museum, and from that appended to Harleian Charter, 43, C.

  • Illustration: Pseudo-gall of the Bramble, drawn from a specimen.

  • Illustration: Gall of the Hawthorn Weevil, drawn from specimen.

  • Illustration: Woody Gall on a Willow branch, drawn from a specimen.

  • Illustration: Pseudo-galls of the Hawthorn, drawn from specimens.

  • The former cognition of our ignorance, which is possible only on a rational basis, is a science; the latter is merely a perception, and we cannot say how far the inferences drawn from it may extend.

  • But this is a quite impracticable procedure, as it surpasses all our powers to discover all the possible inferences that can be drawn from a proposition.

  • Having run such forms to earth, it is still more difficult to say what arguments are to be drawn from their occasional {105} appearance in any text.

  • Further indications can be drawn from references to the halls of Norse chiefs.

  • As these are all dependent on the promise of the dew, and represent different phases of the results of its fulfilment, it is natural to expect thus much uniformity in their variety, that they shall all be drawn from plant-life.

  • The allocation of each part of the symbol is of less importance for us than the lessons to be drawn from it as a whole.

  • The obvious conclusion to be drawn from this is, that if the Acts be historical, Jesus never gave the command put into his mouth in Matthew, but that it was inserted later when such a formula became usual in the Church.

  • But a law must not be drawn from a single fact or phenomenon; facts must be carefully collated, and the general laws of morality drawn from a generalisation of facts.

  • Even in the new colonies which were afterward drawn from them, the French population have uniformly kept up the practice of their religion, {13} the use of their mother tongue, and a lively recollection of their origin.

  • Scarcely a rule can be drawn from them, yet each forms a model separately, a finished group in combination.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "drawn from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    addressed himself; allow myself; also went; buttered dish; could say; drawn back; drawn battle; drawn butter; drawn from; drawn sigh; drawn sword; drawn through; formal education; heart seemed; jury trial; less sterile; light soil; make the; morrow evening; much rather; ought always; silver dish; suggest that; triangle encircled; true understanding; whatever comes